brazil

Dorie Clark: Why Your Brand Must Be an Experience

March 1, 2011

Last year, I traveled to Madrid and was regaled with tales of its paella, sangria, and tapas. But… the Thai food? In fact, it didn’t come to the Spanish capital until 1995, when the small, high-end chain Thai Gardens opened. (They also boast international outposts in Mexico and Brazil). Jonesing for tofu pad thai, I stumbled onto a marketing lesson more American businesses should apply. Branding strategist Martin Lindstrom reports that 83% of commercial communication appeals only to our eyes, yet a full “75% of our day-to-day emotions are influenced by what we smell” and “there’s a 65% chance of a mood change when exposed to a positive sound.” As marketers, we’re leaving an embarrassing amount of money on the table by ignoring the full sensory experience of how customers experience our brands. Most Thai restaurants I’ve visited in the U.S. range from “hole in the wall” to “pretty nice” — a spectrum seemingly determined by the presence or absence of wall hangings, throw pillows and the like (my local favorite has a three-dimensional wooden elephant glued to the cover of their menu). The food can be amazing at any of them. But in most parts of the country, the customer experience — and the prices charged — are rarely top-of-the-line. Thai Gardens, however — located in a country not particularly known for a robust Asian subculture — has staked out the high end with panache. There are the obligatory golden Buddhas. But also dramatic lighting, from dimmed overhead lights to candles and inlaid artwork on the walls, illuminated from above. Rough-hewn stone pillars and copious wood, evocative of a temple. And — just a whiff as you enter the threshold — incense. Aside from stoners and Catholic priests, most Americans neglect it in our everyday lives — so when it’s deployed, it’s powerful. Otherworldly. An experience outside the norm. Something special. And isn’t that worth a few dollars more on your spring rolls? For too many companies, “branding” means a logo and a tagline — period. But that’s only the tip of the iceberg. The real definition of branding is every single way you communicate with your customers, from how you answer the reservations line to the mint at the end of the meal. Your brand — the essence of what you want to communicate to buyers and potential buyers — should permeate everything you do. Incense and well-lit Buddhas may not be the secret for your business. But we can all learn from Thai Gardens and ask ourselves: How do we create a brand that immerses our clients fully? The more powerfully we create a unique experience, the stronger our customer relationships will be. What are your best strategies for creating a powerful brand experience? Dorie Clark is a marketing strategy consultant for clients including Google, Yale University, and the National Park Service. Visit her website , listen to her podcasts or follow her on Twitter .

Read the full article →

Dominique Strauss-Kahn: Latin America: Making the Good Times Better

February 25, 2011

Latin America has enjoyed tremendous economic dynamism and a rising quality of life in recent years. But, faced with new challenges, the question is: how best to sustain this progress? As I travel through the region next week–visiting Panama, Uruguay, and Brazil–I’m looking forward to hearing the views of government officials, parliamentarians, and university students on the key challenges facing their countries today. Here are three questions that I look forward to discussing during my trip. First, as the region enjoys a time of abundance– una época de vacas gordas –can there be too much of a good thing? Latin America’s economies are growing rapidly, buoyed by good access to external financing and high commodity prices. But potentially worrying signs of overheating are popping up–rising inflation, rapidly growing credit, and booming stock markets. We all know how this story can end if policymakers don’t act early enough to prevent boom from turning into bust. Guiding their economies to a soft landing may be the most important near-term challenge facing policymakers in Latin America today. Withdrawing the macroeconomic stimulus adopted during the global crisis should be the first step–and some countries are already doing so. Countries should probably begin with fiscal policy, to reduce the burden on monetary policy. In some cases, however, rising inflationary pressure calls for action now on both the fiscal and the monetary fronts. Exchange rate flexibility is also important. In the current setting, appreciation can help temper capital inflows, by making foreign investors think twice about future exchange rate risk. To protect financial stability, prudential measures may need to be tightened. Finally, while capital controls may be useful temporarily in some cases, they should not be considered a substitute for macro or prudential measures. Second, are countries equipped to handle future times of lean– la época de vacas flacas ? With the global financial crisis only just receding in the rear-view mirror, it may seem premature to think about possible future shocks. But the global economy remains exposed to downside risks, and it is always good to be prepared for a possible change in the economic weather. Latin America’s experience during the crisis–bouncing back from it much better than most other regions–shows the benefit of building policy buffers and reducing vulnerabilities in times of plenty. Over the last decade, countries across the region have strengthened their policy frameworks, lowered public debt, increased foreign reserve buffers, allowed greater exchange rate flexibility, and improved financial supervision and regulation. These all played a role in the region’s success. What about the road ahead? Let me mention two areas where countries in Latin America–and indeed around the world–would do well to focus their efforts. First, fiscal space. One of the most important lessons of the global financial crisis is that economies with healthier public finances had more room to offset the impact of the crisis, and to protect the most vulnerable. Going forward, countries should rebuild fiscal space–and in fact go even farther, where needed, to bring debts down to safe levels. Panama is one of the Latin American countries already working in this direction. Second, financial stability. We also learned from the crisis how quickly seemingly isolated financial problems can engulf the entire financial system, affect the broader economy, and spread across national boundaries. We need better tools to monitor risks both within and across institutions. Regulators and supervisors should be empowered to take early preventive action. Indeed, a number of countries in Latin America–including Brazil–are already strengthening macroprudential financial regulations. Finally, how best to share these times of plenty–across society, and with future generations? Como compartir–y prolongar–la época de las vacas gordas? The region has undergone a dramatic transformation over the past decade, lifting tens of millions of people out of poverty. In Uruguay, for example, the poverty rate has fallen by a remarkable 10 percentage points since 2004. Today, the challenge for the region is to embark on the next stage of its transformation–reforms are needed to sustain strong growth for generations to come, and allow the fruits of growth to be shared across all members of society. Reforms that boost productivity–such as revitalizing infrastructure and improving education and training–are clearly essential. Improving the business climate and strengthening governance are also important for a pro-growth strategy. But growth for growth’s sake is not enough. The region remains profoundly unequal, with about a third of its people living in poverty. Leaders across the region are rightly committed to tackling this problem. And making the social safety net more effective is an important part of the strategy. Here, innovative conditional cash transfer programs–for example, Brazil’s bolsa familia program–are playing an important role, and are in fact being emulated around the world. Raising social spending and improving the quality of service delivery–in education, health, and public infrastructure–are also key priorities. Latin America has come a long way over the last decade. But the region’s transformation is not yet complete. Leaders across the region should capitalize on today’s favorable conditions, transforming their countries to the next level, and ensuring that the benefits of growth are more widely shared. From iMFdirect blog

Read the full article →

Dominique Strauss-Kahn: Latin America: Making the Good Times Better

February 25, 2011

Latin America has enjoyed tremendous economic dynamism and a rising quality of life in recent years. But, faced with new challenges, the question is: how best to sustain this progress? As I travel through the region next week–visiting Panama, Uruguay, and Brazil–I’m looking forward to hearing the views of government officials, parliamentarians, and university students on the key challenges facing their countries today. Here are three questions that I look forward to discussing during my trip. First, as the region enjoys a time of abundance– una época de vacas gordas –can there be too much of a good thing? Latin America’s economies are growing rapidly, buoyed by good access to external financing and high commodity prices. But potentially worrying signs of overheating are popping up–rising inflation, rapidly growing credit, and booming stock markets. We all know how this story can end if policymakers don’t act early enough to prevent boom from turning into bust. Guiding their economies to a soft landing may be the most important near-term challenge facing policymakers in Latin America today. Withdrawing the macroeconomic stimulus adopted during the global crisis should be the first step–and some countries are already doing so. Countries should probably begin with fiscal policy, to reduce the burden on monetary policy. In some cases, however, rising inflationary pressure calls for action now on both the fiscal and the monetary fronts. Exchange rate flexibility is also important. In the current setting, appreciation can help temper capital inflows, by making foreign investors think twice about future exchange rate risk. To protect financial stability, prudential measures may need to be tightened. Finally, while capital controls may be useful temporarily in some cases, they should not be considered a substitute for macro or prudential measures. Second, are countries equipped to handle future times of lean– la época de vacas flacas ? With the global financial crisis only just receding in the rear-view mirror, it may seem premature to think about possible future shocks. But the global economy remains exposed to downside risks, and it is always good to be prepared for a possible change in the economic weather. Latin America’s experience during the crisis–bouncing back from it much better than most other regions–shows the benefit of building policy buffers and reducing vulnerabilities in times of plenty. Over the last decade, countries across the region have strengthened their policy frameworks, lowered public debt, increased foreign reserve buffers, allowed greater exchange rate flexibility, and improved financial supervision and regulation. These all played a role in the region’s success. What about the road ahead? Let me mention two areas where countries in Latin America–and indeed around the world–would do well to focus their efforts. First, fiscal space. One of the most important lessons of the global financial crisis is that economies with healthier public finances had more room to offset the impact of the crisis, and to protect the most vulnerable. Going forward, countries should rebuild fiscal space–and in fact go even farther, where needed, to bring debts down to safe levels. Panama is one of the Latin American countries already working in this direction. Second, financial stability. We also learned from the crisis how quickly seemingly isolated financial problems can engulf the entire financial system, affect the broader economy, and spread across national boundaries. We need better tools to monitor risks both within and across institutions. Regulators and supervisors should be empowered to take early preventive action. Indeed, a number of countries in Latin America–including Brazil–are already strengthening macroprudential financial regulations. Finally, how best to share these times of plenty–across society, and with future generations? Como compartir–y prolongar–la época de las vacas gordas? The region has undergone a dramatic transformation over the past decade, lifting tens of millions of people out of poverty. In Uruguay, for example, the poverty rate has fallen by a remarkable 10 percentage points since 2004. Today, the challenge for the region is to embark on the next stage of its transformation–reforms are needed to sustain strong growth for generations to come, and allow the fruits of growth to be shared across all members of society. Reforms that boost productivity–such as revitalizing infrastructure and improving education and training–are clearly essential. Improving the business climate and strengthening governance are also important for a pro-growth strategy. But growth for growth’s sake is not enough. The region remains profoundly unequal, with about a third of its people living in poverty. Leaders across the region are rightly committed to tackling this problem. And making the social safety net more effective is an important part of the strategy. Here, innovative conditional cash transfer programs–for example, Brazil’s bolsa familia program–are playing an important role, and are in fact being emulated around the world. Raising social spending and improving the quality of service delivery–in education, health, and public infrastructure–are also key priorities. Latin America has come a long way over the last decade. But the region’s transformation is not yet complete. Leaders across the region should capitalize on today’s favorable conditions, transforming their countries to the next level, and ensuring that the benefits of growth are more widely shared. From iMFdirect blog

Read the full article →

GE Makes Big Move Into Oil Business

February 14, 2011

(By Megan Davies): General Electric Co (GE.N) is to buy a unit of British energy services firm John Wood Group (WG.L) for about $2.8 billion, the latest move by the largest U.S. conglomerate to boost its presence in oil services. GE’s acquisition John Wood’s well support division raised hopes of more deals in the oilfield services sector, where GE has recently been an active buyer of assets. GE, which is buying the unit through its oil and gas business, in December agreed to buy Britain’s oil drilling pipemaker Wellstream Holdings Plc for $1.3 billion. That followed a 2008 deal to buy pressure control equipment company Hydril for $1.1 billion and a 2007 deal to buy privately held oil and gas field equipment maker Vetco Gray. The U.S. company has said it could spend up to $30 billion on takeovers in the coming years as CEO Jeff Immelt renews GE’s focus on heavy manufacturing after reaching a deal to sell its media unit and scaling back the GE Capital finance arm. John Wood said it intends to return cash of no less than $1.7 billion to shareholders, helping to boost the company’s shares by 14.6 percent to 657 pence at 0921 GMT on Monday, their highest ever level. “We definitely think they John Wood got an attractive price. It was considerably more than what we were expecting,” said Royal Bank of Canada analyst Todd Scholl. “I would expect that, based on this valuation all of the oilfield services stocks would trade higher. The space certainly is very hot from an M&A perspective. We wouldn’t be surprised to see more deals.” Shares in oil services firm Petrofac (PFC.L) traded up 3.1 percent while London-listed pump and valve-maker Weir Group (WEIR.L), which has an oil field services division, rose 5 percent, with the latter helped by speculation that German conglomerate Siemens (SIEGn.DE) could be interested in it. GE said the John Wood unit acquisition would allow it to tap fast growing demand for enhanced oil recovery from mature oil fields. “Five years ago, drilling and production in GE did not exist,” John Krenicki, CEO of GE Energy said in a telephone interview. “Over the last five years we’ve built it up to be an industry leader.” He said that GE expects the deal to be ‘slightly accretive’ in 2011 assuming it closes by the end of the second quarter. Krenicki doesn’t anticipate more deals in the medium term in the specific area of drilling and production, but said there could be deals elsewhere. “Specific to this space — drilling and production — we think we have got what we needed for the medium term,” Krenicki said. “But the rest of the energy portfolio has capability to do more and we’ll look for things that make sense.” UNLOCKING PUZZLE Wood Group’s Well Support division is comprised of three business platforms — electric submersible pumps (ESPs), pressure control and logging services. GE said that deployment of electric submersible pumps are one of the most effective methods of enhancing production. “If you look at world oil production today, about two-thirds comes from 300 giant wells that are depleting about six percent a year,” said Krenicki. “Of those giant wells, only about one third of the oil has been extracted — for lots of reasons – cost, technology, difficulty. And world oil demand is to grow about 20 million barrels per day over the next decade.” “We know that these (electric submersible pumps) are the key to unlock this puzzle,” Krenicki said. John Wood said earlier in February it was looking into the possible sale of the well support unit. Sources previously told Reuters the company had put the division on the block and had hired Credit Suisse (CSGN.VX) to advise on the sale. Chief Executive Allister Langlands told reporters on Monday that John Wood would use some of the funds to pay for its purchase of oil production services company PSN, which it bought for $955 million in December, and added that the company will also look to make more acquisitions. “We’d like to expand our engineering business in Brazil, we’d like to grow our brownfield support business in Canada so those will be two areas that we continue to look at,” he said, adding that no deal was imminent. GE said on Sunday that Wood Group’s board intends to unanimously recommend the deal to its shareholders. It is expected to close later in 2011, GE said. (Additional reporting by Sarah Young; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Erica Billingham) Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions .

Read the full article →

The Next Global Banking Crisis Is 3 Years Away, Firm Says

February 2, 2011

Let’s start in 2011. The world is in a three-speed recovery, with Europe at the bottom, the U.S. in the middle, and Asia growing between 6 and 10 percent. If you’re an investment bank looking for high returns, where do you look? The fastest gains are in the hottest markets, and the hottest markets are in the developing world. In particular, commodities investments (gold, silver, platinum, rare earth metals, oil) have soaked up lots of excess global money supply and central banks have dropped their interest rates. Commodities-rich economies like Russia, Brazil and the rest of Latin America have been key beneficiaries.

Read the full article →

Public debt increases by 13% in Brazil

February 2, 2011

Public debt increases by 13% in Brazil

Read the full article →

AkzoNobel invests $122.5m in Brazil plant

January 24, 2011

AkzoNobel invests $122.5m in Brazil plant

Read the full article →

Robert Reich: American Competitiveness, and the President’s New Relationship with American Business

January 22, 2011

Whenever you hear a business executive or politician use the term “American competitiveness,” watch your wallet. Few terms in public discourse have gone so directly from obscurity to meaninglessness without any intervening period of coherence. President Obama just appointed Jeffry Immelt, GE’s CEO, to head his outside panel of economic advisors, replacing Paul Volcker. According to White House spokesman Robert Gibbs, Immelt has “agreed to work through what makes our country more competitive.” In an opinion piece for the Washington Post announcing his acceptance, Immelt wrote “there is nothing inevitable about America’s declining manufacturing competitiveness if we work together to reverse it.” But what’s American “competitiveness” and how do you measure it? Here are some different definitions: It’s American exports. Okay, but the easiest way for American companies to increase their exports from the US is for their American-made products to become cheaper internationally. And for them to reduce the price of their American-made stuff they have to cut their costs of production in here. Their biggest cost is their payrolls. So it follows that the simplest way for them to become more “competitive” is to cut their payrolls — either by substituting software and automated machinery for their US workers, or getting (or forcing) their US workers to accept wage and benefit cuts. It’s net exports. Another way to think about American “competitiveness” is the balance of trade — how much we import from abroad versus how much they import from us. The easiest and most direct way to improve the trade balance is to coax the value of the dollar down relative to foreign currencies (the Fed’s current strategy for flooding the economy with money could have this effect). The result is everything we make becomes cheaper to the rest of the world. But even if other nations were willing to let this happen (doubtful; we’d probably have a currency war instead as they tried to coax down the value of their currencies in response), we’d pay a high price. Everything the rest of the world makes would become more expensive for us. It’s the profits of American-based companies. In case you haven’t noticed, the profits of American corporations are soaring. That’s largely because sales from their foreign-based operations are booming (especially in China, Brazil, and India). It’s also because they’ve cut their costs of production in the US (see the first item above). American-based companies have become global — making and selling all over the world — so their profitability has little or nothing to do with the number and quality of jobs here in the US. In fact, it may be inversely related. It’s the number and quality of American jobs. This is my preferred definition, but on this measure we’re doing terribly badly. Most Americans are imprisoned in a terrible trade-off — they can get a job, but only one that pays considerably less than the one they used to have, or they can face unemployment or insecure contract work. The only sure way to improve the quality of jobs over the long term is to build the productivity of American workers and the US overall, which means major investments in education, infrastructure, and basic R&D. But it’s far from clear American corporations and their executives will pay the taxes needed to make these investments. And the only sure way to improve the number of jobs is to give the vast middle and working classes of America sufficient purchasing power to get the economy going again. But here again, it’s far from clear American corporations and their executives will be willing to push for a more progressive tax code, along with wage subsidies, that would put more money into average workers’ pockets. It’s politically important for President Obama, as for any president, to be available to American business, and to avoid the moniker of being “anti-business.” But the president must not be seduced into believing — and must not allow the public to be similarly seduced into thinking — that the well-being of American business is synonymous with the well-being of Americans. Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

Read the full article →

Identity Theft Victim Can’t Convince Freddie Mac He Owns His Home

January 7, 2011

The Identity Theft Resource Center says Ty Powell is a victim of identity theft. Freddie Mac says he hasn’t paid his mortgage in two years. The local paper says he’s dead. Powell says, “I don’t know what to say.” He’s afraid to leave his Casa Grande, Ariz. house for an extended period of time because the mortgage servicer, Chase, might send someone to break in and try to change the locks — something Powell said already happened twice last year after the bank foreclosed on him. The foreclosure was completed last July, and Powell, 30, could be evicted at any time. He said he doesn’t sleep much. “I spent Christmas alone,” he said. Powell said he bought the house from a builder in January 2007, paying $217,000 in savings and cash he’d earned playing professional basketball in Brazil after graduating from Yale in 2002. But as far as Freddie Mac knows, it owns a delinquent $376,703 mortgage taken out in November 2006. Powell said he was in Brazil at the time and had nothing to do with that mortgage. Jay Foley, founder of the nonprofit Identity Theft Resource Center, said the builder apparently used Powell’s personal information, which Powell sent months in advance from Brazil, to take out a fraudulent mortgage in his name. The builder went as far as to make some payments on the mortgage and even attempt a loan workout in 2008. “The builder took out a mortgage on the house in Ty’s name. Then he turned around and maintained the mortgage until Ty came back and bought that house,” Foley said. “This builder sounds like a pretty slick dude and I would love to see him making little rocks out of big ones someplace.” Powell said he found an eviction notice on his door in March. He hired a pricey lawyer. “The argument was that I was not properly served,” he said, “which was not the right argument.” An Arizona judge ruled in favor of Freddie Mac in September. Foley reached the same conclusion as Powell. “His attorney is arguing the wrong point,” he said. “Instead of arguing the loan was fraudulent, the attorney’s arguing it’s the nature of the service because Ty wasn’t served.” Now Powell owes tens of thousands in legal fees, both to his own lawyer and to Freddie Mac’s. Foley isn’t the only one advocating for Powell. In October, his congresswoman, Rep. Ann Kirkpatrick (D-Ariz.), wrote a letter to Freddie Mac stating that the “home mortgage loan was secured without his consent along with various credit cards, and student loans.” (Kirkpatrick was defeated in November by Republican Paul Gosar, whose office should now have Powell’s case file.) Freddie Mac just doesn’t buy it. The loan is in default, the mortgage giant says, so it’s their house now. “We first learned of Mr. Powell’s claim after the foreclosure was completed last July,” a Freddie Mac spokesman told HuffPost. “He filed suit in March 2010 — eight months later — and our request for summary judgment was granted by the court on Sept. 14, 2010. “We believe the foreclosure was legitimate because the loan secured by the property was in default. Despite a mortgage workout in 2008, no mortgage payment had been received since January 2009. We have also referred the matter to our fraud investigations unit.” The Casa Grande Dispatch reported this summer that Powell “died on July 12, 2010, at Casa Grande Regional Medical Center of heart problems.” Managing Editor Donovan Kramer Jr. told HuffPost there’s no record of the email sent to the paper alleging Powell’s passing, or much else. “This was a very brief one and apparently there was no corroborating information,” he said. Powell figures the death notice is a threat from the fraudster. Foley said it’s more likely an effort by the perp to confuse Freddie Mac. Either way, there’s plenty of information corroborating the claim that Powell is a victim of identity theft. The Identity Theft Resource Center provided HuffPost with a stack of letters from banks and local municipalities absolving Powell of other, smaller frauds committed in his name, like phony accounts and drivers’ licenses Chase, the servicer of the allegedly-bogus mortgage, declined to comment because of “ongoing litigation” it refused to describe. Powell said he didn’t know anything about that. “I’ve exhausted all of my resources to try to remedy this,” he said. Convincing Freddie Mac he doesn’t have a mortgage, he said, is like convincing “birthers” that Obama has a legitimate birth certificate. “Obama has the luxury of dismissing these claims as from people on the fringe,” he added. “I don’t have the luxury of dismissing this ridiculousness.”

Read the full article →

London’s Anglos signs $770m accord for Brazil project

December 30, 2010

London’s Anglos signs $770m accord for Brazil project

Read the full article →

Video: Morgan Stanley Beats JPMorgan to Be Top in Equity Sales

December 23, 2010

Dec. 23 (Bloomberg) — Morgan Stanley ended JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s two-year run as the top banker for stock sales after charging the lowest fees and winning deals from the U.S., China and Brazil to arrange offerings by state-owned companies. Erik Schatzker reports on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.” (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Brazil Gold Appoints Veteran Mining Exec Leigh Freeman to Board of Directors

December 23, 2010

BELLEVUE, WA–(Marketwire – December 23, 2010) – Brazil Gold Corp. ( OTCBB : BRZG ) (“Brazil Gold”), a precious metals exploration company focused on the Amazon region of Brazil, today announced it has appointed veteran mining industry executive Leigh Freeman to its Board of Directors, bringing to four the total number of Board members.

Read the full article →

China buys Brazil power assets for $1b

December 22, 2010

China buys Brazil power assets for $1b

Read the full article →

UN Climate Deal Marks A Tiny Step Forward For Fighting Climate Change

December 11, 2010

CANCUN, Mexico — A U.N. conference on Saturday adopted a modest climate deal creating a fund to help the developing world go green, though it deferred for another year the tough work of carving out deeper reductions in carbon emissions causing Earth to steadily warm. Though the accords were limited, it was the first time in three years the 193-nation conference adopted any climate action, restoring faith in the unwieldy U.N. process after the letdown a year ago at a much-anticipated summit in Copenhagen. The Cancun Agreements created institutions for delivering technology and funding to poorer countries, though they did not say where the funding would come from. In urging industrial countries to move faster on emissions cuts, it noted that scientists recommended reducing greenhouse gas emissions from industrial countries by 25 to 40 per cent from 1990 levels within the next 10 years. Current pledges amount to about 16 percent. Mexican President Felipe Calderon, in a 4 a.m. speech, declared the conference “a thoroughgoing success,” after two separate agreements were passed. The agreements shattered “the inertia of mistrust” that had settled over the frustrated efforts for a broad climate treaty, he said. One of the agreements renewed a framework for cutting greenhouse gas emissions but set no new targets for industrial countries. The second created a financial and technical support system for developing countries facing grave threats from global warming. Foreign Secretary Patricia Espinosa, the conference president, gaveled the deal through early Saturday over the objections of Bolivia’s delegate, who said it was so weak it would endanger the planet. Decisions at the U.N. climate talks are typically made by consensus, but Espinosa said consensus doesn’t “mean that one country has the right to veto” decisions supported by everyone else. The accord establishes a multibillion dollar annual Green Climate Fund to help developing countries cope with climate change, though it doesn’t say how the fund’s money is to be raised. Last year in Copenhagen governments agreed to mobilize $100 billion a year for developing countries, starting in 2020, much of which will be handled by the fund. The agreements also set rules for internationally funded forest conservation, and provides for climate-friendly technology to expanding economies. Espinosa won repeated standing ovations from a packed conference hall for her deft handling of bickering countries and for drafting an acceptable deal, though it fully satisfied no one. “It’s been a challenging, tiring and intensive week” said U.S. special climate envoy Todd Stern, clearly content with the results. The European Union’s top climate official, Connie Hedegaard, said Saturday’s decisions would help keep international climate talks on track. “But the two weeks in Cancun have shown once again how slow and difficult the process is,” Hedegaard said. “Everyone needs to be aware that we still have a long and challenging journey ahead of us to reach the goal of a legally binding global climate framework.” Christiana Figueres, the U.N.’s senior climate official, said the agreements would put all governments on cleaner trajectory. “Cancun has done its job,” she said. Environmentalists cautiously welcomed the deal. It “wasn’t enough to save the climate,” said Alden Meyer of the Washington-based Union of Concerned Scientists. “But it did restore the credibility of the United Nations as a forum where progress can be made.” The Cancun deal finessed disputes between industrial and developing countries on future emissions cuts and incorporates voluntary reduction pledges attached to the Copenhagen Accord that emerged from last year’s climate summit in the Danish capital. It struck a skillful compromise between the U.S. and China, which had been at loggerheads throughout the two week conclave on methods for monitoring and verifying actions to curtail greenhouse gases. “What we have now is a text that, while not perfect, is certainly a good basis for moving forward,” Stern said during the decisive conference meeting. His Chinese counterpart, Xie Zhenhua, sounded a similar note and added, “The negotiations in the future will continue to be difficult.” The accord “goes beyond what we expected when we came here,” said Wendel Trio of the Greenpeace environmental group. Underscoring what’s at stake in the long-running climate talks, NASA reported that the January-November 2010 global temperatures were the warmest in the 131-year record. Its data indicated the year would likely end as the warmest on record, or tied with 2005 as the warmest. The U.N.’s top climate science body has said swift and deep reductions are required to keep temperatures from rising more than 2 degrees Celsius (3.8 F) above preindustrial levels, which could trigger catastrophic climate impacts. Bolivian delegate Pablo Solon protested that the weak pledges of the Copenhagen Accord condemned the Earth to temperature increases of up to 4 degrees Celsius (7.2 F), saying that is tantamount to “ecocide” that could cost millions of lives. He also complained that the text was being railroaded over his protests in violation of the U.N.’s consensus rules. In the 1992 U.N. climate treaty, the world’s nations promised to do their best to rein in carbon dioxide and other heat-trapping gases emitted by industry, transportation and agriculture. In the two decades since, the annual conferences’ only big advance came in 1997 in Kyoto, Japan, when parties agreed on modest mandatory reductions by richer nations. But the U.S., alone in the industrial world, rejected the Kyoto Protocol, complaining it would hurt its economy and that such emerging economies as China and India should have taken on emissions obligations. Since then China has replaced the U.S. as the world’s biggest emitter, but it has resisted calls that it assume legally binding commitments – not to lower its emissions, but to restrain their growth. Here at Cancun such issues came to a head, as Japan and Russia fought pressure to acknowledge in a final decision that they will commit to a second period of emissions reductions under Kyoto, whose current targets expire in 2012. The Japanese complained that with the rise of China, India, Brazil and others, the 37 Kyoto industrial nations now account for only 27 percent of global greenhouse emissions. They want a new, legally binding pact obligating the U.S., China and other major emitters.

Read the full article →

US signs open skies deal with Brazil

December 8, 2010

US signs open skies deal with Brazil

Read the full article →

WATCH: Bernanke Defends Bond Buys On ’60 Minutes’, Says Years Until ‘Normal’ Unemployment

December 6, 2010

WASHINGTON (Associated Press) — Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke is stepping up his defense of the Fed’s $600 billion Treasury bond-purchase plan, saying the economy is still struggling to become “self-sustaining” without government help. In a taped interview with CBS’ “60 Minutes” that aired Sunday night, Bernanke also argued that Congress shouldn’t cut spending or boost taxes given how fragile the economy remains. The Fed chairman said he thinks another recession is unlikely. But he warned that the economy could suffer a slowdown if persistently high unemployment dampens consumer spending. The interview is part of a broad counteroffensive Bernanke has been waging against critics of the bond purchase plan the Fed announced Nov. 3. The purchases are intended to lower long-term interest rates, lift stock prices and encourage more spending to boost the economy. WATCH: Critics, from Republicans in Congress to some officials within the Fed, say they fear the Fed’s intervention could spur inflation and speculative buying on Wall Street while doing little to aid the economy. On other issues in the “60 Minutes” interview, Bernanke: _ Argued that unemployment would have been far higher – “something like it was in the Depression, 25 percent” – had the Fed not provided extraordinary aid to Wall Street firms, banks and other companies to ease a credit crisis. _ Said it could take four or five more years for unemployment, now at 9.8 percent, to fall to a historically normal 5 percent or 6 percent. _ Reiterated that the Fed is prepared to buy even more than $600 billion in Treasury bonds over the next eight months, should it decide the economy needs the fuel of even lower interest rates. _ Argued that the risk of inflation is overblown. Bernanke said he’s “100 percent” confident the Fed will be able to ward off inflation, when the time is right, by raising interest rates and unwinding its stimulative programs. _ Called the risk of deflation – a prolonged drop in prices, wages and the values of homes and stocks – “pretty low.” He said the likelihood would have been greater if the Fed weren’t maintaining super-low interest rates. _ Urged Congress to improve the nation’s tax code “by closing loopholes and lowering rates” for individuals and companies. He said doing so would create greater incentives for people to invest. Critics who fear the Fed is raising the risk of inflation have complained that its bond purchases mean the Fed is, in effect, printing more money. In the interview, Bernanke called that a “myth.” He insisted the Fed isn’t printing money when it buys Treasurys and said the program won’t expand the amount of money in circulation in a “significant way.” Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP, said Bernanke is right that the Fed’s purchases won’t significantly change the amount of money circulating in the economy. That’s mainly because banks aren’t lending most of the money they already hold in reserve. When the Fed buys Treasurys, it increases the reserves in the banking system. For those reserves to actually “create” money, the banks would have to lend it. Still, Crandall suggested that the bond-buying program creates the appearance of printing money, something that could put the central bank’s credibility at stake. Bernanke’s apperance Sunday night is part of a public-relations blitz he’s mounted since the Fed announced the program Nov. 3. In private and public appearances, Bernanke has sought to explain and defend the program to ordinary Americans, investors and lawmakers on Capitol Hill. His efforts have included an Op-Ed article in The Washington Post and discussions with students in Jacksonville, Fla., economists in Jekyll Island, Ga., business people in Columbus, Ohio, central bankers in Europe and members of the Senate Banking Committee. Criticism has come from both home and abroad. Officials in China, Germany, Brazil and other countries have argued that the Fed’s plan is a scheme to give U.S. exporters a competitive edge by keeping the value of the dollar weak. A weak dollar makes U.S. goods cheaper abroad and foreign goods more expensive in the U.S. It’s rare for a sitting Fed chairman to grant an interview, whether for broadcast or print. But this was Bernanke’s second appearance on “60 Minutes.” His first was in March 2009. At the time, he was facing anger over Wall Street bailouts and rising anxiety about the economy. In the interview that aired Sunday, Bernanke pointed out that the economy is growing at an annual pace of around 2.5 percent – far too slow to reduce unemployment. For a self-sustaining recovery, consumers and businesses would need to spend more, so the economy could grow faster. Bernanke has said he hopes the Fed’s bond-buying program will help lift stock prices. In part, that’s because lower yields on bonds would cause some people to shift money into stocks and also because lower corporate bond rates will spur business investment. Higher stock prices would boost the wealth and confidence of individuals and businesses. Spending would rise, lifting incomes, profits and economic growth. Bernanke has referred to this as a “virtuous cycle.” Asked whether the recovery is self-sustaining, Bernanke responded: “It may not be. It’s very close to the border.” Given the economy’s still-weak growth, he said: “We’re not very far from the level where the economy is not self-sustaining.”

Read the full article →

Zachary Karabell: Cancun and Climate: Government Won’t Act, But Business Will

November 29, 2010

Over the next two weeks, Cancun will be in the spotlight for something other than spring break madness. As host of the annual climate summit that once saw such promise in Kyoto in 1997, Cancun in 2010 is framed by the spectacular failure of last year’s Copenhagen talks and by the stark realization that nearly 200 nations simply cannot agree on anything of consequence. No matter how unequivocal the scientific evidence is that climate is changing and human activity is a central factor, nearly 7 billion people loosely represented by a few hundred governments are agreed on nothing. We know the reasons why action on climate is frozen: emerging countries such as China, India and Brazil will not accept limits that stifle their rapid emergence; developed countries such as the United States and the European Union can’t or won’t subsidize efforts abroad; and the U.S. federal government can’t even agree on binding limits for America itself. While everyone shares the sentiment that they do not want to destroy the earth or ruin it for their grandchildren, there is no consensus on how to shift global economic activity in a more sustainable direction. That should be cause for despair, and much of the commentary this week will likely conclude that we are on an inexorable and negative path towards deleterious climate change. But that is only because we collectively focus too much on government and its failings rather than on business and its successes. For many in the self-identified community that identifies climate change as humanity’s greatest challenge, big business is seen as an obstacle to a better future. That attitude is a legacy of the 1970s, when the green movement ranked big business as a culprit that couldn’t be redeemed but might be coerced. Today, however, global businesses aren’t being pulled kicking and screaming to innovate and become more sustainable: they are racing ahead of government and may in the end be the one real hope for the future. They aren’t doing so because management has gone green or awoken to some moral environmental imperative. They’ve done so because of the current imperatives of the market: with the price of raw materials skyrocketing in the face of China rapid industrialization and economic growth in the affluent world flat-lining, companies have ample new markets but no real pricing power. In short, they can sell, but any rising input costs they have to absorb. That is a powerful spur to use less stuff, to become more efficient, and to embrace sustainable growth. My recent book Sustainable Excellence (co-authored with Aron Cramer) charts just how companies are doing that. They are too numerous to list, and range from behemoths such as Walmart (yes, Walmart – which has aggressively pushed for more sustainable products), Unilever, Nike, Marks & Spencer, Nestle, and Shell to newer less familiar companies such as Better Place (which is trying to redefine transportation), Masdar (which is building a carbon-neutral city in the deserts of Arabia), Schneider (which is at the forefront of meters and energy efficiency), ICICI Bank (an Indian financial power that is addressing rural poverty), and hundreds of others. They are addressing consumer needs and recasting global supply chains, and doing so in a way that reduces their costs and thus, their carbon footprint. They are doing so largely in spite of government inaction and inconsistency. And they show no signs of reducing their efforts after the financial crisis of the past two years. If anything, that crisis led to redoubled efforts to use less stuff and enhance efficiency. And so while there will be hand wringing and consternation at what Cancun will not achieve, that should be placed against a backdrop of incredible dynamism in corporate land, driven not by idealism but by the urgency of the market. Costs of everything raw are spiking; that includes food, fertilizer, iron ore, copper, rare earths, oil, and even coal in China. And with costs soaring, innovation is as well. It would be lovely if governments were to find concord, and better for the world. But it won’t happen in the coming weeks, and it may not need to. Humanity has always been in tug-of-war between the ability to destroy life and the inexorable capacity to save it and create it. We don’t know which force will win in the future. But we are here now, and that says something about which has come out on top so far. This post originally appeared at www.time.com at http://curiouscapitalist.blogs.time.com

Read the full article →

Fed Officials Clashed Over Massive $600 Billion Program

November 23, 2010

WASHINGTON — Federal Reserve policymakers clashed over the benefits and risks of launching a $600 billion program to rejuvenate the economy, but voted for it anyway, according to minutes of their closed-door deliberations released Tuesday. Despite a near unanimous 10-1 vote in support of the program, the minutes from the Nov. 2-3 meeting show that some Fed officials had concerns about embarking on a second round of stimulus. The minutes also reveal that the Fed held an unusual videoconferenced meeting Oct. 15 to discuss its communications strategy. At that previously unknown meeting, officials considered whether it might be useful for the Fed chief to hold occasional press briefings to provide more detailed information and insights into the Fed’s thinking. No decision was made. The Fed also discussed at the October meeting whether to adopt an explicit inflation target but decided against it. Inflation has been running below the Fed’s comfort zone of between 1.5 percent and 2 percent. That spurred some concern of deflation – a prolonged and dangerous drop in prices, wages and in the values of assets like homes or stocks. In discussing the bond-purchase program Nov. 3, some officials said they thought the additional purchases would have only limited effect in revving up the economy. The Fed’s Treasury bond-buying program is intended to invigorate the economy in part by lowering interest rates, lifting stock prices and encouraging more spending. Some also worried about risks – unleashing inflation or causing a destabilizing slide in the value of the U.S. dollar. In the end, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke persuaded all but one of his colleagues to back the plan. Thomas Hoenig, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, was the sole dissenter. Explaining the need for more stimulus, the Fed said that progress on its key dual mission of maximizing employment and making sure prices are on an even keel had been “disappointingly slow.” In fact, the Fed downgraded its forecasts for this year and next. Fed officials said that economic growth would be weaker and unemployment higher than previously estimated in June. Fed officials also discussed at the October meeting pumping billions into the economy by targeting a rate for a specific government security. The Fed would then buy bonds to lower the rate on that security to the Fed’s target. Doing so, would be aimed at bolstering the economy. The Fed, however, didn’t go that route. Instead, the Fed decided to buy $600 billion worth of Treasury bonds over eight months. That decisions has provoked a barrage of criticism at home and abroad. Republican economists and lawmakers have criticized the move, saying it could lead to runaway inflation. Some of them also complain that the Fed is printing money to pay for Uncle Sam’s bloated debt. On the international front, China, Brazil, Germany and other countries are irked by the move, complaining that is a scheme to further drive down the value of the U.S. dollar, giving U.S. exporters a competitive advantage over their foreign rivals. The Fed has said it will regularly review the bond-buying program and has left the door open to scaling it back if the economy performs better than expected. It could also buy more bonds if the economy weakens.

Read the full article →

Petrobras discovers light oil off Brazil’s southeast coast

November 18, 2010

Petrobras discovers light oil off Brazil’s southeast coast

Read the full article →

Gold Anomaly Limited (ASX:GOA) Updates on Sao Chico Gold Project in Brazil

November 17, 2010

Gold Anomaly Limited (ASX:GOA) Updates on Sao Chico Gold Project in Brazil

Read the full article →

Gold Anomaly Limited (ASX:GOA) Updates on Sao Chico Gold Project in Brazil

November 17, 2010

Gold Anomaly Limited (ASX:GOA) Updates on Sao Chico Gold Project in Brazil

Read the full article →

Blythe McGarvie: Where the Action Is: Consumer Spending

November 8, 2010

I research and write about economic realities in the interconnected world and their implications for you and your business. I first discovered, in 1983, when I joined the Kellogg Alumni Council, that business school professors provide inspiration, analysis and thoughtful insight into the nature of business. You may be surprised that academia is relevant in these fast-paced and uncertain times. I have learned from them how to rely on quantitative and behavioral research to provide a deeper understanding of what I read in many media outlets. The headlines focus on conflict and controversy, not what happens during the rebuilding process. While professors research and consult, business men and women create and grow businesses. We all succeed by going where the action is. Let’s look at where the action is for consumer spending. Current Consumer Spending The largest component driving the U.S. GDP is consumption. In the last ten years, GDP has been comprised of roughly 70% consumer spending, 15% of exports to other countries, 10% of direct investments, and 5% of government purchases. Today, as some signs indicate an easing of the recession, U.S. consumers continue to hold back from spending. The most recent GDP information for the first half of 2010 shows that Exports increased 10% over last year. Direct Investments have increased 28%, Government Purchases increased by 1%; but, Consumption increased only 2%. Consumers will not be spending at their previous levels for a host of reasons. In fact, according to the President’s economic report in February: The growth that preceded the recession saw high consumption spending, low private saving, excessive housing construction, unsustainable run-ups in asset prices (especially for assets related directly or indirectly to housing), and high budget and trade deficits. That path was unstable — as we have learned at enormous cost — and undermined long-run prosperity. Thus, as the economy recovers, a rebalancing will be necessary. The model used in the report indicates that three factors drive the tradeoff between savings and spending. The higher the sense of wealth, the lower unemployment expectations, and the greater the ability to borrow (and pay back), the more people will spend. The recent stock market rallies and the lowest interest rates in decades suggest some optimism for spending. And, importantly, the GDP is growing at 2.7% and not contracting. Jobs will return in those areas that support exports and direct investments. But, the largest engine for the US GDP is stalled due to consumers’ sentiment about unemployment and their pressing need to pay down their current debt levels. According to a government report released November 1st, U.S. consumer spending rose by less than expected in September as income fell for the first time in 14 months. Inflation remained minimal. Other Countries’ Consumer Spending The news for major developing countries is quite different. Consumer confidence and purchasing behavior indicators in Brazil, Mexico, Taiwan, and Hong Kong are growing strongly (between 1 to 4%) and those of India and China are growing even faster (more than 5%). Each quarter, The Nielsen Company publishes the state of the global consumer and purchasing behavior. Included in this scorecard is the level of advertising spending, a leading factor in consumer spending. The key learning from this data is that the consumer is cautious; but, longer term, with 30 of 31 countries showing positive ad spending in the 2nd quarter of 2010, global consumer spending may receive a boost. Consumers respond to innovations and promotional activities. Tapping into Consumers Global companies continue to innovate. For example, DuPont launched more than 1400 new products in 2009, a 60% increase from 2008. The company filed more than 2,000 patents — its highest number in its history. Sales from emerging markets of $8 billion exceeded 2007 levels and are projected to grow at a 14% annual compounded growth rate to 2012. New companies also are discovering that consumers will spend money on items that they find innovative. The founder Robert Croak of the company selling Silly Bandz states: “I came across a product that a Japanese designer had created for an industrial design contest. I thought it would be really neat if we remolded it, made it thicker, larger and into a fashion accessory — and that’s how Silly Bandz was born.” Knowing “where the action is” helps management to focus on new business opportunities. One of my colleagues, Roger Schmid, recently gave a lecture and wrote about Brazil, where he works with consumer companies which you can find on our website LIFgroup.com . The only way to capitalize on this knowledge of which markets are growing is to be agile and nimble. This means knowing how to adjust your plans of action to find new consumers for your products. Of course, while you are in the markets, keep your eyes open for new competitors and innovative ideas.

Read the full article →

Raymond J. Learsy: Food — The American Midwest at the Cusp of an Economic Renaissance

November 7, 2010

“The Midwest has lost a manufacturing empire but has not yet found another role.” Words that were written by the New York Times ‘ incisive Op-ed page contributor David Brooks in Friday’s Op-ed “Midwest at Dusk.” He cites the vast American expanse from central New York and Pennsylvania out through Ohio, Indiana spreading to include Wisconsin and Arkansas. Here, Brooks proffers, is the place where the trajectory of American politics is being determined. “If America can figure out how to build a decent future for the working-class people in this region, then the U.S. will remain a predominant power. If it can’t, it won’t.” And yet, here, as hardly elsewhere in this nation, something is stirring that has the potential of becoming a game changer, a uniquely American game changer. This summer past an event took place that has begun to alter the equilibrium of economic trends and influence. In July the Russian government, responding to a disastrous drought, embargoed the export of wheat — unilaterally breaking sales commitments to national buyers throughout the world. The price of wheat and other grains such as corn, soybeans etc. exploded as reserve stocks of grain were being drawn down worldwide. Yet, the underlying thrust of what took place has been barely touched upon. The world, with its steeply growing population and rapidly changing dietary habits (especially in the emerging economies) is on the precipice of food shortage. If not immediately, it will be very soon. It is generally understood that with expanding populations world calorie production will have to double by 2050, but no one quite knows how to achieve this given that the major impact of the “green revolution” (intense application of fertilizers, herbicides and improved seeds) has already reached dangerously diminishing returns. In this coming crisis, America — and the American Midwest — will play a crucial and salutary role. It will become the most crucial provider of food grains to the world, building on an already leading, but barely heralded position of leadership. The United States is now the largest grower and exporter of corn, vital as feed to the food chain, the largest exporter of wheat, and after Brazil the second largest exporter of soybeans. And as supplies of foodstuffs get tighter this position of preeminence will become more and more significant. Now is the moment for a government with vision to lay the groundwork and prepare the breadbasket of America to renew itself and prepare for the destiny that will be thrust upon it. Instead of more overbuilt highways, now is the moment to improve the infrastructure servicing this sector such as refurbishing and extending our inland waterways system over which most of our grain is transported, improving port facilities and refurbishing and adding to our grain storage capabilities both inland and at ports of export loading. Further, that we now initiate a policy of extending to farmers and the agribusiness the kind of government financial support we stood ready to give to Wall Street, the finance industry, and the automobile industry, so that the ground work can be prepared to meet the demand that is verging on the horizon. The Midwest is blessed with vast expanse of fertile land and great human talent as nowhere else in the world, coupled with an extensive inland waterway system permitting crop production to reach world markets. With proper policies in place going well beyond the current US Department of Agriculture assistance programs, now is the moment to extend to our agricultural sector the means to ready itself for the responsibilities and opportunities to come. The Midwest has the potential of becoming in importance, the Saudi Arabia of food — a commodity that will clearly surpass oil in economic, social and political significance. If proper policies are initiated now our Midwest will become the most important real estate in the world. And it will be an economic sector that cannot be outsourced!

Read the full article →

Robert Reich: America’s Two Economies, and Why One Is Recovering and the Other Isn’t

November 6, 2010

Next time you hear an economist or denizen of Wall Street talk about how the “American economy” is doing these days, watch your wallet. There are two American economies. One is on the mend. The other is still coming apart. The one that’s mending is America’s Big Money economy. It’s comprised of Wall Street traders, big investors, and top professionals and corporate executives. The Big Money economy is doing well these days. That’s partly thanks to Ben Bernanke, whose Fed is keeping interest rates near zero by printing money as fast as it dare. It’s essentially free money to America’s Big Money economy. Free money can almost always be put to uses that create more of it. Big corporations are buying back their shares of stock, thereby boosting corporate earnings. They’re merging and acquiring other companies. And they’re going abroad in search of customers. Thanks to fast-growing China, India, and Brazil, giant American corporations are racking up sales. They’re selling Asian and Latin American consumers everything from cars and cell phones to fancy Internet software and iPads. Forty percent of the S&P 500 biggest corporations are now doing more than 60 percent of their business abroad. And America’s biggest investors are also going abroad to get a nice return on their money. So don’t worry about America’s Big Money economy. According to a Wall Street Journal survey released Thursday, overall compensation in financial services will rise 5 percent this year, and employees in some businesses like asset management will get increases of 15 percent. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is back to where it was before the Lehman bankruptcy filing triggered the financial collapse. And profits at America’s largest corporations are heading upward. But there’s another American economy, and it’s not on the mend. Call it the Average Worker economy. Last Friday’s jobs report showed 159,000 new private-sector jobs in October. That’s better than previous months. But 125,000 net new jobs are needed just to keep up with the growth of the American labor force. So another way of expressing what happened to jobs in October is to say 24,000 were added over what we need just to stay even. Yet the American economy has lost 15 million jobs since the start of the Great Recession. And if you add in the growth of the labor force — including everyone too discouraged to look for a job — we’re down about 22 million. Or to put it another way, we’re still getting nowhere on jobs. One out of eight breadwinners is still out of work. Most families in the Average Worker economy rely on two breadwinners. So if one out of eight isn’t working, chances are high that family incomes are down compared to what they were three years ago. And that means the bills aren’t getting paid. According to a recent Washington Post poll , more than half of all Americans — 53 percent — are worried about making their mortgage payments. This is many more than were worried two years ago, when the Great Recession hit bottom. Then, 37 percent expressed worry. Delinquency rates on home loans are rising. Distressed sales are up as a percent of total sales. Most people in the Average Worker economy own few shares of stock, if any. Their equity is in their homes. But with all the delinquencies and distressed sales, the housing market has a glut of homes for sale. As a result, home prices are still dropping. So the net worth of most Americans is still dropping. And even though interest rates are falling, most people in the Average Worker economy can’t refinance their homes. They can’t get home equity loans. Banks don’t want to lend to the Average Worker economy because people in it are considered bad credit risks. They still owe lots of money, their family incomes are down, and their net worth has fallen. And according to the Reuters/University of Michigan survey of American consumers, expectations about personal finances are at an all time low. Inhabitants of the Big Money economy are celebrating Republican wins last week. They figure financial regulations will be rolled back, environmental regulations will be canned, the Bush tax cut will be extended to the top 1 percent, and it will be harder for workers to form unions. Inhabitants of the Average Worker economy aren’t so sure. The economy has been so bad they’re angry at politicians. They showed their anger at the ballot box. They took it out on incumbents. But if nothing changes in the Average Worker economy, there will be hell to pay. Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

Read the full article →

Robert Lenzner: Celebrating QE2,Republican Victory,Bush Tax Cuts

November 5, 2010

Celebrating QE2, Republican Victory And The Bush Tax Cuts The results of the midterm elections are a fiscally necessary surprise gift for investors. Robert Lenzner All those investors who liquidated stocks for bonds must be licking their wounds after the great reflation of assets was inaugurated this week. The Bernanke Bump, the well-orchestrated promotion of Quantitative Easing along with the debasing of the dollar have been driving commodities, emerging markets and precious metals into a frenzy. The Bush tax cuts will survive. QE2 wasn’t a surprise at all. But the better than expected results for Republicans in Congress prefigured an Obama compunction to compromise with his opponents. A very fiscally necessary surprise gift for investors. The tax on the sale of stocks, bonds and other assets–what we call the capital gains tax–will remain at the at the historically low rate of 15%, as proposed by the George W. Bush administration in 2003, when the tax cuts were passed in order to improve the lot of investors after bear market of 2000-2002. In fact, the lower tax led to a greater number of transactions and far large tax revenues for Uncle Sam. For 2011 at least, and maybe longer, the capital gains tax will remain at 15%–not double or triple that, as the Obama administration was threatening. So refocus your animal spirits on high-yield bonds (through the iShares High Yield Corporate Bond Fund ( HYG – news – people ), stocks that have a record of increasing their cash dividend for the past 25 years (the SPDR S&P Dividend ETF ( SDY – news – people )), and REITs that pay out a high percentage of their income in dividends. Gold lovers must have woken up Thursday to celebrate QE2, a printing of more dollars with the purpose of driving the price of assets into the wild blue yonder. As a joyous occasion, Gold is still relatively inexpensive in comparison with the Dow Jones industrial average. If gold continues to run up, major gold miners like Randgold Resources ( GOLD – news – people ) could move up at a multiple of two to three times the price of bullion. According to U.S. Global Investors ( GROW – news – people ), a mutual fund group in San Antonio, Texas, another, smaller gold holding that hasn’t run up as much is Medoro Resources, a Colombian gold producer (MRS), according to Frank Holmes, U.S. Global’s CEO. Related Stories In the metals area, copper producer Freeport-McMoRan Copper & Gold ( FCX – news – people ) has run up mightily since the summer, from $60 to $105, and is still selling at only 12 times earnings. A classic example of a stock you must hold for the big move: Its copper reserves are being funneled off to China ever more quickly and at rising prices. Here’s the November Irony to remember: QE2 seems a reward from Ben Bernanke to investors, speculators, gold and silver fanatics and the holders of currencies that rise as the dollar falls (Australia, Singapore, Korea, Brazil).

Read the full article →

Robert D. Atkinson, Ph.D.: Ending Innovation Mercantilism

October 26, 2010

The following is a guest post written by Stephen Ezell, Senior Analyst, Information Technology and Innovation Foundation As it’s becoming clearer every day that innovation is the central driver of economic growth, more and more countries are trying to be innovation leaders. Unfortunately, in that quest all too many countries are choosing to go down a path of “innovation mercantilism” by implementing beggar-thy-neighbor strategies designed to gain advantage at the expense of other nations and overall global innovation progress. These nations see the royal road to prosperity as through expanded technology exports and the best way to do that they believe is through gaming the international trading system through a number of mercantilist practices, including by manipulating their currencies, distorting technology standards, providing export subsidies, forcing technology transfer as a condition of market access, pirating intellectual property, and favoring indigenous over foreign technology products and services in government procurement. While China is perhaps the most egregious example of a country practicing innovation mercantilism, it is by no means the only one, as similar (if not as prevalent) practices can be found in Brazil, Argentina, India, Japan, Russia, Singapore, South Korea, and a host of other, even European Union, nations. As these countries bend and break the rules, play zero-sum games, and think only about short-term gains for themselves at the expense of the rest of the world, they undermine and destabilize the international economy and risk killing the innovation goose that would lay the golden egg for them and for the rest of the world. In a just-released report, The Good, The Bad, The Ugly, and The Self-Destructive of Innovation Policy , the Information Technology and Innovation Foundation (ITIF), provides a comprehensive catalog of countries’ innovation policies toward skills and immigration, trade, tax, scientific research, intellectual property, government procurement, standards, and regulations. The report assesses whether countries are implementing innovation policies in ways that are either: 1) “Good,” benefiting the country and the world simultaneously; 2) “Bad,” failing to benefit either the country or the world; 3) “Ugly,” benefiting the country at the expense of other nations; or 4) “Self-destructive,” actually hurting the country while benefiting others. It finds that, unfortunately, the Good policies tend to be outnumbered by the Bad, Ugly, and Self-destructive ones. Many of the fastest growing innovation policies are of the Ugly variety; benefiting the country, at least in the short run, but hurting the rest of the world. Mercantilist practices can indeed be effective–there is no doubt about that. China’s “Ugly” practices such as currency manipulation, pilfering intellectual property, and forcing technology transfer as a condition of market access have in fact boosted the country’s exports, moved productive activity to its shores, and hurt foreign producers (and in many cases knocked them out of business entirely). From 2006 to 2010, China’s share of world exports jumped from 7 to 10 percent and the country ran up a $826 billion trade surplus in the years 2007 and 2008 alone. But many of the policies that nations think are beneficial to them are actually Bad. That is, the policies hurt not only the rest of the global economy, but also the economy of the nation implementing it. An example is mercantilist countries’ practice of manipulating their currencies to artificially lower them in an attempt to help their exporters. But doing so raises the price of capital goods, especially for information and communications technology (ICT) products, inhibiting the diffusion of ICTs throughout all other sectors of their economy, making those sectors less competitive, and causing overall economic productivity to stagnate. As another example of a Bad innovation policy, for every $1 of tariffs India imposed on imported ICT products (as part of its efforts to spur an indigenous computer industry), the country suffered a net economic loss of $1.30. Why then do so many nations pursue Ugly, Bad, or even Self-destructive innovation policies? Most of them–and the apologists who defend them–have convinced themselves that they need to do this to succeed economically. They are wrong. They believe that “exports are needed to create jobs.” In fact, exports don’t create jobs, at least in the moderate to long-term. These nations could achieve full employment just as readily by implementing a loose monetary policy, aggressive fiscal policy, and an effective social safety net. They don’t need trade surpluses to employ all their workers. They also claim that innovation mercantilism helps them move up the value chain and get richer. But in reality, the much surer way to get rich is through raising the productivity levels of all industries, not just export-oriented ones, particularly by applying innovation and leveraging information technology. Just look at Japan. It certainly boasts world-leading manufacturers in automobiles, consumer electronics, and ICT products, but the non-traded sectors of its economy, such as retail, have only a fraction of the productivity of Western ones, it trails badly in the usage of ICTs, and it conspicuously lacks any world-class service firms. Consequently, the overall productivity of Japan’s economy is 70 percent of America’s. As a recent New York Times article made clear, as Japan has reached the dead-end of a predominantly export-led growth strategy, it has fallen into economic malaise. Finally, many of these policies impoverish, not enrich, their citizens. For example, If China didn’t run its $428 billion trade surplus and instead imported real goods and services instead of Treasury bills, Chinese households would on average see a 17 percent increase in their disposable income. While many nations have bought into the wrong economic theory, it wouldn’t be as serious a problem as it is if their misguided policies didn’t also hurt other nations individually and global innovation rates overall. For example, when a country steals intellectual property, instead of itself expanding R&D funding, it lowers global knowledge stocks. Likewise, when one country manipulates its currency, others feel forced to follow suit to stay competitive. Thus, the global trading system devolves into a competition where every country is incented to cheat and so the overall global economy suffers. Other countries’ mercantilist policies not only move innovation-based jobs away from the United States, which is bad for us, but also undermine globalization, which is bad for all. As such, we need a system of globalization that moves nations away from Bad, Ugly, and Self-destructive polices toward Good ones, such as improved education systems, an openness to high-skill immigration, increased R&D funding, effective science and technology policies, policies to spur widespread digital transformation of their economies, etc. Good innovation policies benefit the entire world, because innovations in one place ultimately spillover to the benefit of citizens worldwide. Think of a new pharmaceutical developed in South Korea or France that benefits all peoples, or when nations adopt new techniques in teaching and training. To be sure, when other nations implement Good, effective innovation policies, it means the U.S. will have to compete even harder to be successful in the global race for innovation advantage. So when France trumps the United States by offering an R&D tax credit six times more generous, or Denmark creates innovation vouchers for small businesses, or the Netherlands and Switzerland offer tax exempt status for profits generated from a newly patented product, this is all tough, fair competition. Ideally, countries’ constructive innovation policies spur other countries to emulate or improve on them, and all countries win. How can we end innovation mercantilism and develop a better approach to globalization? We need to start with a recognition that the current approach to globalization is not working. The new approach should be grounded in the perspective that markets drive global trade; that countries adhere to their trade agreements; that genuine, value-added innovation across all sectors drives economic growth; and that fair competition between nations to develop the best innovation policies is good for the world. At the coming mid-November G-20 summit, President Obama needs to insist that putting an end to countries’ rampant innovation mercantilism and developing a more sustainable vision for globalization top the agenda. The G-20 should demand that the World Bank and other multinational development agencies reformulate their strategies with a focus on supporting only countries that mostly practice Good innovation policies, and withdraw support from those whose predominant strategy is based on Ugly and Bad ones. The WTO needs to finally recognize and combat that what has been transpiring in the global trading system is not occasional and random infractions of certain trade provisions by countries that should be handled on a case-by-case basis, but rather that some countries continue to systematically violate the core tenets of the WTO because their dominant logic toward trade is predicated on export-led growth through mercantilist practices. The only way to stop countries’ systematic manipulation to gain competitive advantage by beggaring their neighbors is if the nations which engage in it less than others–principally the U.S., the Commonwealth nations, and most European countries–alongside with international organizations including the World Bank, WTO, and the International Monetary Fund agree to cooperate to fight it. The status quo is no longer sustainable. We should use the institutions and rules we have at our disposal with more gusto and nip innovation mercantilism in the bud. However, if these measures prove insufficient, it may be time to think about establishing a new trade zone, perhaps modeled on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, which would include only those nations committed to good innovation policies. Innovation is poised to continue to bring globally shared growth and prosperity–but policymakers must understand this will only happen if all countries are compelled to play by the rules mutually established by the international community to guide the economic interactions between nations.

Read the full article →

Cencosud buys Brazil’s Bretas for $813m

October 17, 2010

Cencosud buys Brazil’s Bretas for $813m

Read the full article →

Muhtar Kent: This Century Goes to the Women

October 14, 2010

Let’s discuss the future of our global economy and society. Specifically, I’d like to discuss women, and the role women will play in transforming our global economy and society over the next decade. I also want to share some thoughts on the role women will play in helping transform The Coca-Cola Company over the next decade and beyond. Like so many of you, I usually start my day with National Public Radio. And driving into work one recent morning, I got stuck in Atlanta traffic and my attention turned to a report on the radio. It was yet another story about China’s rise in the world. Some economists were predicting that China would most likely eclipse Japan as the world’s second largest economy by the end of this year — a full five years ahead of most previous projections. Perhaps you heard the same report. China’s GDP is projected to grow to more than $5 trillion dollars this year. Of course, a day doesn’t go by without some new breathtaking statistic about China or India or Brazil, or some other fast-growing economy in the developing world. No one has done a better job chronicling the economic rise of the rest of the world than Fareed Zakaria. I’ve had the good fortune of meeting Fareed on a number of occasions and I am always impressed by his fascinating insights on the global landscape. In his seminal book, The Post-American World , he wrote at length about the nations that will be driving the 21st century economy, and the implications this will have on America. I think there’s another way of looking at this as well — one that goes beyond national comparisons. In fact, I would say that real drivers of the “Post-American World” won’t be China … or India … or Brazil — or any nation for that matter. The real drivers will be women. Women entrepreneurs, women business, political, academic and cultural leaders — and women innovators. The truth is that women already are the most dynamic and fastest-growing economic force in the world today. Women now control over $20 trillion dollars in spending worldwide. To put that into context — that’s an economic impact larger than the U.S., China and India economies combined. But there’s so much more to the story. Here in the U.S., women-owned businesses account for nearly $4 trillion dollars in GDP. That’s right: $4 trillion dollars in economic output. This alone constitutes the fourth-largest economy in the world. Only the U.S., Japan and China are larger today. Women’s entrepreneurship doesn’t stop at U.S. borders, of course. It is soaring around the world. In fact, today, one in 11 working-age women is now involved in entrepreneurship. And the highest percentages of women business owners are in markets you might not expect. Consider this: nearly 20 percent of working women in Thailand are entrepreneurs. In India, it’s 14 percent; Argentina, 12 percent; Brazil, 11 percent; and Mexico and Chile 10 percent. And these percentages are rising every year. So, let’s for the moment forget all the talk about the “China Century” or the “India Century” or the “BRIC Century.” The real story is that the 21st century is going to be the “Women’s Century.” As the world desperately looks for ways to restart and reset the global economy, the solution lies right in front of us. In the words of World Bank President Robert Zoellick, gender equality is simply “smart economics.” Now, I realize some of you may be scratching your head and thinking — “Why is this guy so interested in women’s empowerment issues?” That’s a fair question. For starters, I have been managed by women all of my life … beginning at birth with my mother. Now Defne and my daughter, Selin, continue that strong management tradition today. I like to think they’ve done a wonderful job. Selin is also in the early stages of her professional career. I would like to see my daughter flourish professionally in a world that is more just and equitable for women, and where the benefits of diversity are fully appreciated. I also a feel a deep and personal obligation to uphold the legacies of my father and father-in-law — men of great principle who worked tirelessly to promote the rights of all men and women. And, of course, as a business leader and someone who has been given the responsibility of creating shareholder value for the world’s most recognized brand — I feel a tremendous sense of urgency in ensuring that conditions are ripe for women to thrive around the world. Call it self-interest … or enlightened self-interest — it really doesn’t matter. Creating a climate of success for women globally is just simply smart business for a consumer-products company. It’s smart business for any company. Empower women and you recharge the world. In recent months, magazines ranging from Business Week to The Economist have cited studies that show a direct correlation between women’s empowerment and national GDP growth, business growth, environmental sustainability, and improved human health, just to name a few things. The community, social, and family implications are vast. For instance, there’s no question that women influence public opinion inside the home. At Coca-Cola we have massive banks of information on shoppers and consumers around the world and all of our data points to women as the household opinion elites. Women determine what comes into the home and in what quantity and frequency. It’s probably no surprise to you that women account for the majority of purchase decisions for our beverages. In fact, they represent 70 percent of all grocery shoppers. At Coca-Cola, we can’t grow our business or reach any of our long-term business goals without greater women’s economic empowerment and entrepreneurship around the world. In fact, no business or economy will be able to grow without this. All the growth projections we’ve been hearing about for the coming years — for China, for India, for Africa, for North and South America — none of it will be possible without women’s economic empowerment. The only way a projected billion people will rise to the middle class in the next 10 years… the only way the world will grow $20 trillion dollars richer… the only way more nations will rise out of poverty and become more politically stable… will be by women achieving gender parity on a global scale. If we fail in this regard, the world’s economy will fail. While business and society have made great progress in recent years, the journey has just begun. We still see too many roadblocks to women’s empowerment. Cultural roadblocks … educational roadblocks … political roadblocks … financial roadblocks, and technology roadblocks, to name just a few. I had a great conversation not long ago with President Obama’s Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women’s Issues, Melanne Verveer. Ambassador Verveer said something very poignant about the persistent lack of access to capital for women entrepreneurs. She said, and I quote: “Too many of the best business ideas die in bank parking lots. That’s got to change and it will change.” Here I’d like to outline 3 concrete ways that business, government and academia can have a significant impact in generating female empowerment around the globe. This is the new model. We in business have to think differently about the way we work with and view governments and NGOs. Governments and NGOs, in turn, need to think differently about the way they work with and view business. And academia needs to continue be an impartial filter of the truth — keeping us all honest. So let me just preface this by saying that these three areas are not nice to-dos … rather they are imperative to our long-term viability. 1. The first way we can help fuel women’s empowerment is the most obvious: Accelerating women’s leadership within our own four walls. One of the most fulfilling programs I am personally involved in is serving as the chair of our company’s Women’s Leadership Council, which we initiated three years ago. In this role, I work with senior women executives throughout our company to identify strategies to accelerate global recruitment, development, advancement and retention of women. The program is built around the core focus areas of: Building a leadership pipeline Creating an enabling culture that values personal sustainability. And driving employee engagement within our company. One area of major concern for our women employees across all of our global geographies is work-life balance. To help ease some of the burden, in 2008 we initiated flexible-work arrangements in North America and provided a global framework and tool kits for our business units around the world. In addition, we have grown the number of women in upper management level positions across our company, and our female employee engagement rate is now higher than our overall company engagement rate. Today, women hold top leadership positions in our corporate finance group, including our Head Controller, M&A and Internal Audit executives. Women make up half of our Global Public Affairs and Communications leadership team, and about half of our legal team. We have women in our top science and regulatory, quality and human resources positions. One of our largest and most important global operating units — Europe — is led by a woman, and our operations in my native country, Turkey, is run by a woman. While we’ve made good progress the past three years, we have much, much work to do. I am holding myself accountable for greater progress. We have aggressive metrics in place that are embedded into our 2020 Vision — our growth path forward for the next 10 years and beyond. We are pushing ourselves to more than double our volume and revenue. We’re pushing ourselves to be among the greatest places in the world to work. We’re pushing ourselves to be even more consumer focused … more community focused … and more environmentally focused. We can’t do any of that without greater participation of women at our senior ranks, and we know we need to get there sooner rather than later. For Coca-Cola, this is absolutely mission critical. The keen insights women bring to our business are profound, to say the least. As more and more women around the world gain economic power, we need to be there to ensure the right shopper insights, the right mix of products, and the right marketing and merchandising strategies. This is the message I took to Davos earlier this year when I appeared on a gender-parity panel discussion with Arianna Huffington and Facebook COO Sheryl Sandberg, among others. 2. Another theme that was echoed in that discussion was the importance of bringing more women-owned businesses into our supply chains — which is the second area where business, government and academia can continue to impact massive change. Because of the global reach and influence of our operations, we can be powerful agents of constructive change. One of the most exciting women’s entrepreneurial development programs we have been involved in at Coca-Cola is our Micro Distribution Center network in Africa. This program allows independent entrepreneurs to set up distribution centers on behalf of our company. Micro Distribution Centers are typically located in areas where a lack of stable roads and infrastructure makes it difficult for delivery trucks to travel. This independent network of entrepreneurs distributes Coca-Cola’s beverage products to retailers, often by bicycle or pushcart. In fact, the vast majority of our sales in countries such as Kenya, Tanzania, Uganda, Ethiopia and Mozambique are the result of this business model. Nearly a thousand of these businesses in Africa alone are owned by women. Here’s story of one of these entrepreneurs. Her name is Rosemary Njeri and she has been running a Micro Distribution Center in downtown Nairobi for the last 10 years. She’s a hard-working, hand’s-on business owner who likes to lead by example and is very loyal to her staff. Rosemary has grown her business so successfully that today she employs 16 people, some of whom have worked with her since she started. Two of her salespeople have been able to build their own houses from the income they’ve earned working for Rosemary. Rosemary’s livelihood has simply blossomed. In addition to her thriving distribution business, she now invests in real estate and she has been able to educate all three of her children. The multiplier effect of such actions are significant. Today, across our global supply chain, we work with upwards of 10 million women-owned or operated businesses — from suppliers and distributors to retailers — that derive a significant portion of their profits from Coca-Cola. We know there’s more we can do stimulate even greater female participation across our global value chain. Two weeks ago I met with President Clinton in New York and announced our commitment to reach out and help empower 5 million women entrepreneurs by the year 2020. Now that may sound bold, but I have seen the power and conviction of our system, and when we put our mind to something we achieve results. To achieve this, we’re going to partner with other companies, governments and civil society organizations to bring all of our skills and resources to bear to help break down the barriers that small businesswomen face. Barriers like access to credit, peer networking and basic training. We’re going to give high potential women in our system a chance to champion and manage this work. There is so much business knowledge across our workforce that we can transfer to emerging entrepreneurs. Basic accounting knowledge, business planning, marketing, merchandising, customer service, and legal advice to name just a few areas. And we’re going to encourage all Coca-Cola associates — men and women alike — to take advantage of this opportunity to support women small business owners through one-on-one mentoring and training. I should be clear, too, that this kind of initiative will also reach millions of men who are part of this vast network. All boats will rise. As our suppliers and retail customers gain greater skills and empowerment, their businesses will reflect this. And Coca-Cola’s business will reflect this. We are all in this together. We’ve seen, time and again, that as women rise in their communities — the communities themselves rise to new heights of prosperity and health. 3. This leads directly to the third area in which business, government and academia can help promote global women’s economic empowerment, and that is by staying committed to sustainability initiatives. In this economic environment, there has been lots of discussion across the business world about cutting back on corporate sustainability initiatives. That’s extremely short sighted as this is exactly the time to recommit to these programs. Whether it’s, educational initiatives, environmental programs, human-health programs, cultural programs or economic-development initiatives — all of these touch and influence women’s empowerment and entrepreneurship. Everything is inter-related. We have experienced this countless times in the communities we serve in over 206 countries. As you might imagine, water is a huge focus of our sustainability efforts at Coca-Cola. It is central to our business and to our future. Water is also a fundamental women’s economic empowerment issue. Here’s one example. In Mali, we dug a well in a rural village so that women wouldn’t have to spend 8 hours a day walking back and forth to a clean water source. The savings in time allowed these village women to reinvent their lives. Guess what they did with their new freedom? They started their own catering and events business. This well-drilling program, by the way, was developed by one of our young female managers at Coca-Cola. Which brings me back full circle. Smart organizations — and those that succeed over the next decade and beyond — will understand that the 21st century is the “Women’s Century.” Women’s economic empowerment and entrepreneurial growth will drive the world’s economy. It’s not a matter of “if” — but rather a matter of “to what heights.” For all of us in business, government, education and civil society — the implications will be vast and profound. Everyone’s success will be contingent upon women’s success. This is not a battle of the sexes. Far from it. This is a battle for preserving and enhancing the world’s economic, environmental and social fabric. It’s just that simple. No one knows this more than Yale which has flourished to an unprecedented level these past 40 years as a coeducational institution. Adapted from the address I delivered to the Yale World Fund on October 1, 2010.

Read the full article →

Diane Francis: China’s Cheating Outed by Other Poor Countries

October 13, 2010

There are roughly 15 million unemployed Americans. China has to generate 15 million new jobs a year just to keep employment levels where they are, or 300,000 jobs per week. The official number of migrant workers, those from China’s impoverished rural regions who work in its cities, is estimated to be 120 million, or 9% of the population. That estimate is undoubtedly low and higher than the population of Mexico. These are the reasons behind Beijing’s jawboning on the issue of its currency manipulation. Everyday low prices for Chinese exports have lifted the country into second place economically and its leaders are committed to stalling the inevitable revaluation as long as possible. This is their fiduciary obligation and also a social imperative in a country that is a cell phone swarm away from revolution in certain regions. What’s interesting, however, is that China’s other cornerstone policy is its hold over the US and EU economies. Trillions are held in its government and, quietly, in blue chip stocks. Its been buying Yen and Greece’s bonds to keep both currencies higher. China has also chosen to benefit, trade-wise, certain key influencers such as Germany’s automakers and certain US blue chips so they will lobby against retaliatory action on the currency front. This week’s award of a Nobel Peace Prize to a jailed Chinese activist is an embarrassing backdrop but what will turn the tide is the anger of other emerging economies with job creation problems of their own “We are in the midst of an international currency war,” said Brazil’s finance minister earlier this week. This week these emerging economies began to gang up against China as its artificially low Yuan is going to force them to have to competitively devalue their currencies and impose damaging protectionist measures. World Bank chief Robert Zoellick knows where this leads — to a Great Depression — and has said so but the emerging economies are also in a box. They have done what the US should have done long ago. For months, US Treasury Secretary, Tim Geithner, has played good cop to Congress’ bad cop even though he has in his hip pocket proof that China’s 25% to 40% undervalued and can, without approval, impose an equivalent tariff on all Chinese goods and services. China protests that this retaliation would contravene World Trade Organization rules — a claim which is, considering the scale of their cheating, laughable. Meanwhile, the devaluation of the US dollar is helping the stock markets along with the glacial improvement in incomes and spending. (US incomes were up 0.4% in August and consumer spending 0.5% following months’ of increases). But this week’s events reveal that it is time that the US, EU, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, Turkey and everyone must gang up. Since 2008 when the developed world hit the wall, China’s created another 30 million jobs or nearly the population of Canada or California. Enough’s enough.

Read the full article →

Gordon Brown: Climate Change Action Is Economic Common Sense

October 10, 2010

Today, thousands of environmental campaigners will hold workshops on climate change, sponsored by the website Avaaz.org . There will be more than 6,000 events in 170 countries — a powerful human signal that, even after a year of disappointment, the climate change movement will not die — or fade away. It is powered by the most elemental of human instincts — our sense of responsibility to our children, and the threats we see to their future. And the fight has never been more urgent. The future is coming to meet us now: there are new climate change refugees and evacuees every day. This week I spoke to the past Nobel Prize winner Wangari Maathai about the terrible loss of livelihoods occurring through deforestation — and about our need to move forward reforestation initiatives in the Congo Basin, Amazon and Borneo. And last week I also spoke to Jens Stoltenberg, the Prime Minister of Norway, whose UN group is planning how we raise 100 billion dollars a year for post-2020 funding of adaptation and mitigation in the poorest countries. And now, in the autumn of 2010, in a world climbing back from the global financial crisis, climate change should be at the top of the agenda of every government for another reason: investment in low carbon technologies offers us a way out of a lost decade of slow growth and high unemployment. The case for climate change action is not just a moral crusade — it is an economic necessity. It can be a major component in the engine of growth — and massively reduce the world’s levels of unemployment. As I will argue in a forthcoming book, low carbon technologies, renewables and balanced energy polices — and their export potential — represent a new way of living that can help free Europe and America from today’s high unemployment and the specter of economic stagnation. Despite the disappointments of Copenhagen, China’s five year plan will this year give greater priority to low carbon development — not least the export of wind turbines. 2010 will also see the expansion of India’s solar mission; more evidence of Brazil’s climate change ambitions; and the results of Norway’s joint effort with Brazil, Indonesia and Guyana to finance forestation on a new pay-by-results basis. But the biggest driver of climate change action — and the biggest job creator of all — could be a European Union commitment to a low carbon energy super-grid as a mega pan-European initiative. The evidence is compelling. Carbon emissions came down 7 per cent in 2008. The EU is now on course to meet its minimum target for 2020 of a 2O per cent reduction in emissions (-17 per cent already). Today — with a huge surplus of carbon permits in the system, and a carbon price at just 15 Euros per ton — companies have more incentive to invest in a new generation of gas, coal and oil-fired generation power stations than in low carbon technologies. However, the European Climate Foundation’s “Roadmap 2050″ shows that with a bold set of policy decisions now, renewables, nuclear and carbon capture and storage could supply 40% more carbon free electricity by 2050. A low carbon European super-grid — an enhanced transmission network, connecting power sources to demand across and beyond the continent — is the most productive, ethical and practical way forward. The super grid is an asset that makes economic and environmental sense. And by investing an additional 1OO billion dollars a year to 2050, thousands of jobs and exports will follow. A carbon price of 20-30 Euros per ton of CO2 — on a par with the expected 2050 oil price — would make such a decarbonized power system no more expensive than a carbonized system — but much cleaner and more employment friendly. Green technologies can give Europe — and if they choose, America — economic advantage at home and export potential abroad. Those of us at the vanguard of climate change action have always understood that the environment is beyond price. Without a clean and sustainable world we will simply cease to be. But now we can add economic common sense to the argument for change — because growth and new jobs for today’s 2OO million unemployed global workers can come from environmental strategies based on low carbon technologies. The challenge of climate change is not just a moral issue for our time, but an opportunity to make the world’s economic future stronger and more secure.

Read the full article →

Deepak Bhargava: Corporate Values, Community Woes

October 8, 2010

There’s a near universal consensus that we have a massive systemic employment crisis in America. Economists agree , the American people agree and even policymakers agree (though they seem paralyzed against taking bold action). The problem is clear: America’s engine of job creation is breaking down. The private sector plainly isn’t creating enough jobs. The solution to this must come on two fronts. Most importantly, government has to step in as it has done during other major recessions and depressions to fill in the gap with direct job creation. Unemployment has created a massive hole in the economy. Only the government has the resources and tools to create the jobs we need, thus priming the pump to get the private sector job creation engine running again. I’ve written about that here and here . The second front requires our nation to ask and expect more from the private sector itself — particularly from large corporations that should invest resources back into the communities that sustain them by creating quality jobs. When the financial markets crashed in 2008, the American people, acting together in the common interest, bailed out some of America’s biggest corporations. We put $23 trillion on the line to save the “too big to fail” corporations that irresponsibly got us in this economic mess. There was and remains considerable controversy over whether this was the right thing to do. We’ll never know if the bold intervention by the U.S. government truly stopped a massive economic collapse on the scale of the Great Depression or whether we were merely duped into helping rich CEOs keep their huge bonuses. What we do know is this — government (Republicans and Democrats together) acted boldly because they believed a threat to us all required collective action to benefit the entire American community. How have the corporate interests repaid America for this? In many enraging ways: by lobbying against affordable health insurance for ordinary Americans, fighting against regulations which would prevent another financial collapse, and blocking spending that would help create jobs on Main Street. All of these are hugely disappointing and hypocritical responses, but the concern I wish to focus on at the moment is even more fundamental. Corporate America isn’t doing their share to get us out of this crisis. They aren’t creating jobs. Quite to the contrary, during the last economic quarter, corporations reported “near-historic” profits, largely by cutting costs, laying off employees and streamlining operations. Basically, after being bailed out by taxpayers and with nearly unlimited access to cheap money (courtesy of tax payer backed government intervention), corporate America is again getting super rich by firing workers, outsourcing labor and shutting down less profitable divisions. Right now corporations are richer than they have been in more than five decades. Taken together, American corporations have $1.6 trillion in cash on hand, and those reserves represent the highest percentage of assets since 1964. Given this unprecedented greed, our economy faces a catch-22. Companies won’t spend and invest in America until our economy gets back on its feet. Unfortunately, the American economy can’t get back on track until companies start spending rather than hoarding money or the government institutes a truly bold direct job creation program (something that’s being blocked by Republicans and their corporate lobbyists). Adding further to this depressing reality is that the massive cash reserves of corporate America, even in the best of times, are far more likely to be used buying new factories and facilities abroad in places like China, Brazil and India, investing in new labor-saving technologies here in America and, of course, for mergers and acquisitions (which nearly always cost jobs and concentrate more wealth at the top). All this disinvestment in American communities is done in the name of the free market and the supposed laws of economic growth. The problem is that most of these laws are myths. Prosperity is not generated by a small class of bankers and CEOs. Prosperity is created by all of us — workers, managers, teachers, parents, public servants and everyone else who contributes something of value to the community. Nations that invest wisely in the real needs of people — education, health care, a safe environment, a secure income — are not just happier, but more prosperous than those that foster great private accumulations of wealth. No economy can grow strong when most people are insecure and living on the edge. We tried that, and it didn’t work. Corporations owe the American community quality jobs, not because of the laws of the free market but because their success is built on the success of all of us. Corporate wealth is built on a huge number of public subsidies, not the least of which is public education from kindergarten through to America’s top universities. Corporate markets around the world thrive under the protection of America’s armed forces. Even basic infrastructure from roads and air corridors to basic science research funded from the public coffers to the internet itself (the product of a government research project) form part of an intricate web that ties corporate wealth to all our communities. Literally, we are all part of this extraordinary wealth generation. Creating a different kind of economy means returning to the values of mutual security, equity and interdependence. This economy would be organized around four core action principles: Full employment with a living wage for all of those who want to work Public and private investment in industries that offer long-term growth potential while meeting essential human needs (e.g. clean energy, efficient transportation, preventative health care, healthy food, early childhood education, elder care) Community planning to focus local creativity, leadership and resources on sustainable economic development Reconstruction of the financial and corporate governance systems to foster these goals America can’t succeed as an idea or as an economy unless we all do our part to contribute to our mutually-shared future. Right now, corporate America isn’t doing enough, and that must end. To let corporate America know that you demand more from them, text CHANGE to 69866.

Read the full article →

Video: John Stephenson Says Alcoa Stock `Poised’ to Rise: Video

October 7, 2010

Oct. 7 (Bloomberg) — John Stephenson, portfolio manager at First Asset Investment Management and author of “The Little Book of Commodity Investing,” talks about Alcoa Inc. earnings. The largest U.S. aluminum producer reported third-quarter profit that topped analysts’ estimates and raised its 2010 global consumption forecast to a 13 percent increase on higher demand in China, Brazil and India. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Dave Johnson: How "Free Trade" Led to Currency War

October 6, 2010

This post originally appeared at Campaign for America’s Future (CAF) at their Blog for OurFuture as part of the Making It In America project. I am a Fellow with CAF. Lyndon Johnson is said to have commented that the press is like birds sitting on a telephone line. When one flies away, they all fly away. This week they are all flying around squawking ” currency war !” But the world has been in a currency/trade war for some time, with only one side fighting and the rest losing. Now the world, on the edge of defeat in that war, sees that China is not “trading”, they are taking. So, how to fight back, without (further) blowing up the world’s economy? The world can’t get to full recovery from this terrible recession without more balanced trade. That is a huge part of the equation. Our trade deficits started with Reagan when ” free trade ” was used to force concessions from labor by threatening to move the factories to non-democracies , away from the wage and environmental protections that We, the People fought so hard to achieve. The wage squeeze resulted in unprecedented concentration of wealth — and loss of buying power for the rest of the population. Under George W. Bush, Wall Street used China for short-term profits and bonuses and China used the power that brought to buy advantage around the world. So now the rest of us are living with the long-term consequences of race-to-the-bottom policies. Namely, the bottom. That loss of buying power — lack of demand — is holding back recovery. To lift the economy we need to lift wages . We can’t get there without challenging current arrangements with China. Yves Smith sums up this “full boil,” in Currency War Threats Escalating , at Naked Capitalism, Last week, the simmering threat of trade disputes erupted into a full boil when Brazil’s finance minister Guido Mantega said that national governments around the world were weakening their currencies in an “international currency war” to gain competitive advantage. Mantega stressed that Brazil was prepared to back his words with action to lower the value of the Brazilian real. Yesterday, IMF chief Dominique Struass-Kahn warned that countries were beginning to use their currencies as “a policy weapon” in a Financial Times interview. So does the world now go into a full-on, chaotic currency/trade war? Martin Wolf weighs in at the Financial Times , How to fight the currency wars with stubborn China , (Click through to see the charts) Has the time for a currency war with China arrived? The answer looks increasingly to be yes. The politics and economics of an assault on Chinese exchange rate policy are increasingly convincing. The idea is, of course, deeply disturbing. But I no longer believe there is an alternative. Wolf runs down the issues. Currency manipulation? “If a decision to invest half a country’s gross domestic product in currency reserves is not exchange rate manipulation, what is?” Does it matter? “By keeping its real exchange rate down, China subsidises production of its exports and import substitutes. Since China is now the world’s biggest exporter, this has to be a significant distortion of world trade.” What might China reasonably be asked to do? Stop the manipulation and increase domestic demand. “[T]he menu of possible options for the Chinese authorities could include a cap on the intervention, an end to sterilisation of the monetary consequences and targets for real domestic demand, household consumption and the current account.” Can other countries shift China’s policies, with limited collateral damage? Negotiation remains a hope. The rest of Group of 20 leading countries should unite in calling for these changes. But if negotiation continues to fail, alternatives must be considered. Import surcharges are one possibility. … countervailing currency intervention … affected countries could prevent other countries from purchasing their financial instruments, unless the latter offered reciprocal access to their financial markets. OK, about that “without (further) blowing up the world’s economy” I mentioned at the top. Instead of tariffs and other trade sanctions Wolf suggests currency-rate counter-policies, “I find ideas for intervention in capital markets far more attractive than those involving action against trade. … A trade war would be very dangerous. Insisting that China stop purchasing the liabilities of other countries so long as it operates tight controls on capital inflows is, instead, direct and proportionate and, above all, moves the world towards market opening.” Will China retaliate by ceasing to buy US bonds? If they do, that would be a good thing. Some fear that a cessation of Chinese purchases of US government bonds would lead to a collapse. Nothing is less likely, given the massive financial surpluses of the private sectors of the world and the continuing role of the dollar. If it weakened the dollar, however, that would be helpful, not damaging. Yves Smith weighs in on Wolf’s recommendations, Yves here. I see the odds of things going Wolf’s way as close to zero. China has no intention of “opening” its markets to investment bankers; it is not about to have its capital markets colonized, and it lacks the domestic finance skills to cope. China has made a close study of the errors Japan made in its peak years, in the 1980s, and one was the overly rapid deregulation of its financial sector….in response to US pressure. Similarly, the impetus to put pressure on China IS coming from the trade front, due to high unemployment. Action on the trade/tariff front looks like a more direct remedy, even if, as Auerback points out, the lags in trade are long. And with more economists lining up behind the crowd-pleasing idea of getting tough with China, the pressures and the intellectual cover, are in place. Even though no one wants a trade war with China, it is not beyond the real of possibility that we wind up there. … he odds of miscalculation have to be magnified when operating across a large cultural divide. I wrote the other day , and want to repeat: There are always winners and losers. Right now in China there are currently winners and losers from the manipulated currency rate. If rates adjust to where they should be China might lose some jobs, but Chinese workers will immediately be higher-paid relative to the world than they had been, and Chinese consumers will also be more able to buy things made elsewhere. Right now those in control of industries that are moving to China are winners and those in China who want higher pay and want to import are losers. And as is the way of the world, the winners in China are fighting to keep their advantages, while the losers want change to occur. And outside of China the winners are fighting to keep their advantages, while the losers want change to occur. But if China starts bringing its currency to market rates the world’s winners and losers will be the winners and losers for the right reasons. It is time for China to move on from currency manipulation. Sign up here for the CAF daily summary .

Read the full article →

Roxanne Taylor: Putting People Back to Work Means Teaching Skills to Succeed

October 5, 2010

Amid encouraging signs that the global economy has once again begun to grow, the International Labour Organization last week issued some sobering news. The UN work agency said global employment will not recover to pre-crisis levels until 2015 if current policies are pursued. The agency said 22 million jobs still need to be created to return to pre-financial crisis job levels. Putting millions of people back to work is the special expertise of the private sector; governments cannot possibly do it alone. But it is no longer enough for businesses to simply create jobs, we now must create a skilled and flexible workforce, as well. Last month, my company, Accenture, announced plans to train at least 250,000 people around the world by 2015 on the skills needed to get a job or start a business. In our efforts, we’re not alone. Companies like Marks & Spencer in the U.K. have set a goal of offering 500,000 employees in their clothing supply chain with education and training in healthcare, worker’s rights and, where possible, literacy and math. (Marks & Spencer calls their sustainability program Plan A because “There’s no Plan B.”) Goldman Sachs’ 10,000 Women initiative will provide “underserved” women around the world with business and management education. Our own Skills to Succeed initiative teams us with some of the world’s most knowledgeable NGOs, like Oxfam, Junior Achievement and Women’s World Banking, to ready people for the job market. In Africa, for example, we’ve partnered with the Canadian-headquartered Enablis which just accredited its 100,000th business person in a highly successful, continent-wide entrepreneur’s network. And in Brazil, where official unemployment stands at more than 8%, with youth unemployment in urban areas much higher, we’ve partnered with two local agencies, Rede Cidada and the Committee for the Democratization of Information, to create Conexao, now part of YBI. Some 13,500 young people have been trained in everything from rudimentary computer to job-ready technology skills. About 3,500 have already found jobs. At the moment, Accenture employees are engaged in more than 80 other initiatives in our local markets around the world. Skills to Succeed is not a weekend project peripheral to our business. All activities are done on Accenture time. It’s real dollars and the pro-bono time and skills of our talented people, not just their good will on Saturdays. While the initiative reflects the individual core values, culture and character of Accenture, the program says something greater about the nature of any private sector program that strives for sustainability and success. It is the outgrowth of what we do for a living. Developing skills to help people get jobs, build businesses and improve their communities is one of the top three issues our clients tell us they care about. So the program aligns both with our client concerns and our core skills. We’ve tried to be extremely disciplined in our focus on teaching employment-readiness and business- and market-building, including the use of technology in business development. We’ve made sure to set goals that are realistic but at the same time stretch us. We’ve focused on building partnerships and programs that are sustainable. We’ve set some very clear and specific performance outcomes that we can measure. Over the next three years, we’ll be spending something on the order of $100 million, part cash and part pro-bono work by our employees. That’s substantial for a company like ours. But if our efforts can help reduce the time the ILO says it will take to put people back to work, if it will speed the global economic recovery in some small way, then it will benefit not just the newly employed worker or Accenture. Skills to Succeed will benefit us all.

Read the full article →

Video: Volpon Says Brazil’s Real May Appreciate on Vote Runoff: Video

October 4, 2010

Oct. 4 (Bloomberg) — Tony Volpon, strategist for Latin America at Nomura Securities International Inc., talks about the impact Brazil’s presidential runoff may have on currency valuation. Volpon speaks with Deirdre Bolton on Bloomberg Television’s “InsideTrack.’ (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

Robert Reich: Why It’s Foolish to Weaken the Dollar to Create Jobs

October 4, 2010

I keep hearing the only way we’re going to get jobs back any time soon is with a weak dollar. Baloney. Here’s the theory. As the dollar falls relative to foreign currencies, everything we export becomes less expensive to foreign consumers. So they buy more of our stuff, creating more jobs in the U.S. At the same time, everything they make costs us more. So we buy less from them and more from each other. Again, more jobs here at home. Washington is actively pursuing a weak dollar as a jobs policy. (The dollar just plunged to a six-month low against the euro.) How? The Fed is keeping long-term interest rates so low global investors are heading elsewhere for high returns, which bids the dollar down. Every time another Fed official hints the Fed will start printing even more money (“quantitative easing” in Fed speak) the dollar takes another dive. Meanwhile, Congress is ginning up legislation to allow the President to slap tariffs on Chinese imports because China is “artificially” keeping its currency low relative to the dollar. But using a weak dollar to create American jobs is foolish, for two reasons. First, no other country wants to lose jobs because its currency becomes too high relative to the dollar. So a weak dollar policy invites currency wars. Everyone loses. At least a half dozen other countries are now actively pushing down the value of their currencies. Japan recently sold some $20 billion of yen in order to keep the yen down, the biggest ever sell-off in single day. Last week, Brazil’s Finance Minister lashed out at the US, Japan and other rich nations for letting their currencies weaken to spur jobs. Brazil’s high interest rates are attracting global investors and pushing up the value of Brazil’s currency. This is crippling Brazil’s exports and fueling unemployment. Here’s the other problem. Even if we succeed, a weak dollar makes us poorer. Imports are around 18 percent of the US economy, so a dropping dollar is exactly like an extra tax on 18 percent of what we buy. It’s no big accomplishment to create jobs by getting poorer. You want to know how to cut unemployment by half tomorrow? Get rid of the minimum wage and unemployment insurance, and make everyone who needs a job work for a dollar a day. The Commerce Department just reported that U.S. incomes rose half a percent in August, the biggest jump since last September. That’s good news. But it’s no trend. Incomes plunged into such a deep hole last year that a half percent rise is still in the hole. Since the start of the Great Recession, millions of working Americans have had to settle for lower wages in order to keep their jobs. (Here at the University of California, the wage cuts are called “furloughs.”) Or they’ve lost higher paying jobs and can only find work that pays less. Or they’ve lost their benefits. Or their co-pays, deductibles, and premiums have soared. And their employer no longer matches their 401(k) contributions. Two-tier wage contracts are the newest vogue in labor relations. Older workers stay at their previous wage; new hires get lower wages and smaller benefits. Even a wage freeze becomes a lower wage over time, as inflation eats into it. For three decades America’s median wage has barely budged, adjusted for inflation. Get it? The goal isn’t just more jobs. It’s more jobs that pay enough to improve our living standards. Using a weakening dollar to create more jobs doesn’t get us where we want to be. Robert Reich is the author of Aftershock: The Next Economy and America’s Future , now in bookstores. This post originally appeared at RobertReich.org .

Read the full article →

Video: Brazil Set to Elect Lula’s Chosen Heir in Weekend Vote

October 1, 2010

Oct. 1 (Bloomberg) — Bloomberg’s Eric Coleman reports on this weekend’s presidential election in Brazil and the legacy of President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Read the full article →

Bombardier wins $816m contract in Brazil

September 28, 2010

Bombardier wins $816m contract in Brazil

Read the full article →

ENRC plans $670m expansion in Brazil

September 21, 2010

ENRC plans $670m expansion in Brazil

Read the full article →

Video: Poll Shows Investors Think Global Economy Has Stabilized: Video

September 21, 2010

Sept. 21 (Bloomberg) — Three out of five global investors say the world economy has weathered the financial crisis and has stabilized two years after the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc., according to a global quarterly poll of 1,408 investors, analysts and traders who are Bloomberg subscribers. Separately, the U.S. fell behind emerging markets in Brazil, China and India as the preferred place to invest, though the world’s largest economy still ranks highest of all major developed countries, according to the poll. Bloomberg’s Jon Erlichman and Deidre Bolton report. (Source: Bloomberg)

Read the full article →

George Soros: U.S. Economy Is ‘Blah’ And China’s Rise Is ‘Phenomenal’

September 15, 2010

Billionaire investor George Soros began his Wednesday morning remarks, which spanned a broad range of topics on the global economy, with a pithy summary of the U.S. financial situation. “If I had to sum it up in one word, I would say ‘blah,’” Soros said in a hour-long talk with Reuters global editor-at-large Chrystia Freeland. “In other words, it may slip into double-dip, or it may not. But it’s going to slow down.” (To see a full video of Soros’s remarks, check out t his video from Reuters .) He said it’s too early to abandon fiscal stimulus, arguing that the 2009 legislation has been under-appreciated. “It’s a counter-factual, because you don’t know what it would have been if he [President Obama] hadn’t done it,” Soros said. “The trouble with a confidence-multiplier is that if reality doesn’t live up to your expectations, then confidence turns to disappointment. And that’s where we are today.” The thrust of the talk, though, was the rest of the world. China, Soros said, has emerged as the new “motor” of the world economy. Whereas U.S. consumers were the motor before the crisis, Soros said, now the Chinese economy, though “a smaller motor,” is what’s driving global markets. “China is a great winner, rising very rapidly because the west is sinking,” he said. “The shift of power is phenomenal. I have not seen anything like it. It is difficult to find a parallel. For the rise of a new power, it takes decades, and it’s happening here in a much shorter time.” “Today I would say that the Chinese currency is the strongest currency in the world, except you can’t own it,” he continued. The Chinese government has placed controls on its currency to make sure it doesn’t appreciate in value, ensuring that Chinese exports, which have vaulted the country to its current position, remain attractive to the rest of the world. “If China liberalized, the Chinese currency would actually replace to a large extent the dollar as the store of value,” Soros explained. “But they don’t want that, because that would destroy the machine that has made them so successful.” He was bullish on the developing world as a whole, citing India and Brazil, along with China, as leaders. “That is the great hope, that the developing world develops faster [than the developed world],” he said. “And that is the positive side of the current situation.” “The so-called ‘west’ is under pressure. And you include Japan in that,” he continued. “And the rest of the world actually makes up for it. That is reason to believe we’ll get through this, and it’s not going to be such a dismal scenario.” On gold, which Tuesday saw a record high, Soros was more skeptical. Although he called it the “only actual bull market currently,” he said gold is “the ultimate bubble, which means it may be going higher, but it’s certainly not safe, and it’s not going to last forever.” (For a full video of Soros’s remarks, check out this video from Reuters .)

Read the full article →

Incoming, Inc. Appoints New CEO to Lead Business in New Direction

September 14, 2010

Company to Focus on Renewable Energy Projects in Brazil

Read the full article →

Damien Hoffman: Is China Building the New-and-Improved Global Empire?

September 8, 2010

First the the Egyptians gave it a run. Then the Greeks and Romans took a try. Later the Iberian Peninsula and Great Britain sat atop the throne for a round. And, of course, there is no shortage of historical dynasties in Asia. However, since the end of WWII, the United States has held the title of most powerful empire on Earth. It all came together with a concoction of confidence, ambition, work ethic, and unity. There were also some very helpful details such as sanctions on Germany and Japan, a war torn Europe and Russia, and a surprisingly insulated Asia. Fast-forward to 2010. The US has squandered a couple generations of wealth through trade imbalances and costly wars. Then the recent economic crisis created the perfect window of opportunity for a faster growing and more economically stable China (FXI) to start deploying their rooks and bishops. My passion is strategy. And when I look at how China has started diversifying away from the dollar, building an internal consumer class, and buying huge reserves of natural resources across the globe, I see an emerging global empire that may never shed an ounce of blood in conquest for their prize. This weekend

Read the full article →

Damien Hoffman: Is China Building the New-and-Improved Global Empire?

September 8, 2010

First the the Egyptians gave it a run. Then the Greeks and Romans took a try. Later the Iberian Peninsula and Great Britain sat atop the throne for a round. And, of course, there is no shortage of historical dynasties in Asia. However, since the end of WWII, the United States has held the title of most powerful empire on Earth. It all came together with a concoction of confidence, ambition, work ethic, and unity. There were also some very helpful details such as sanctions on Germany and Japan, a war torn Europe and Russia, and a surprisingly insulated Asia. Fast-forward to 2010. The US has squandered a couple generations of wealth through trade imbalances and costly wars. Then the recent economic crisis created the perfect window of opportunity for a faster growing and more economically stable China (FXI) to start deploying their rooks and bishops. My passion is strategy. And when I look at how China has started diversifying away from the dollar, building an internal consumer class, and buying huge reserves of natural resources across the globe, I see an emerging global empire that may never shed an ounce of blood in conquest for their prize. This weekend

Read the full article →

Nathan Gardels: While China Hits No. 2, Opportunity in America Is Shrinking

August 23, 2010

America was once known around the world for its pragmatic attitude in getting things done and looking toward the future. Now we’ve been overtaken by partisanship, political gridlock and short-termism. Today it is the non-ideological pragmatism and long-term political horizons of the emerging economies, notably China, that are showing the way. Nobel laureate Michael Spence, chairman of the independent Commission on Growth and Development associated with the World Bank, thinks there are lessons to be learned from their resilient bounce back after the financial crisis. I spoke with him last week in Italy. ———————— Nathan Gardels : In your report on “post-crisis growth” you noted the “resilience” of China, which has bounced back to high growth after the Wall St. crash and is now officially the second-largest economy in the world. What are the key factors of China’s resilience? Will China be able to keep bouncing back, or might the recessionary winds from across the Pacific cool things down? Michael Spence : China — along with India and Brazil — is going to get through this crisis pretty well and will be able to sustain its growth in the years ahead. China, in particular, is capable of sustained growth if it can properly manage structural change in several dimensions. First, China is going through a “middle-income transition” in parts of the country as earlier “growth drivers” in the export sector, notably low-wage manufacturing along the coast, die off and must be replaced with other drivers such as services. The domestic consumer will have to become more important so there is a better match between the productive potential of the economy and domestic demand. Second, China is going to have to get quite a bit more income into the hands of the household sector in order to drive growth from within the domestic market. That means getting away from the very high levels of investment in the corporate and public sector where the marginal return on investment is declining. Disposable income as a percent of GDP is low, and the savings rate is high, around 40 percent of GDP. Third, they have to get their current account surplus down in the global economy or they will get a bad reaction from outside, for example protectionism. If they can get the surplus down, that will help the global economy, but it will also help build domestic demand and household income. This is a complicated set of changes to navigate, but I believe the Chinese leadership is up to it. I’ve been able to listen in and participate in some of their internal discussions, and I think they are going in the right direction. Certainly there are interests that want to block these changes. But the same qualities that have enabled China’s resilience so far — a long-term horizon, decisive policy-making and consistent follow-through by a generally competent government — bode well for the future. Because of their long time horizon there is a high level of understanding by the leadership that the economy has to evolve. Looking out at where they want China to be in 10 or 20 years, they know that an advanced economy cannot be based, as China is today, on labor-intensive process manufacturing for export. They have seen how South Korea has managed the middle-income transition. I’m sure they are intensively studying that experience. Gardels : With a nearly 9 percent annualized growth rate, Germany has picked up as the bright spot, a saver and strong exporter among the indebted consumer democracies of the West. Yet, some say this so-called “German miracle” is really “the Chinese miracle” since their dramatic recovery is mostly due to high-end exports to China. Are we seeing a “German miracle” from which rest of the West could learn? Or is it mainly due to a kind of “reverse coupling” where China is pulling Germany out of the doldrums? Spence : Germany is doing well for two related reasons. First, the export sector is very healthy. And that is the result of the fact that over the last decade Germany has gone through a major restructuring of its economy in which workers traded some income for more job security, greater flexibility of hiring and firing was allowed, and work-sharing (kurzarbeit) instead of layoffs during the downturn has enabled key companies to retain skilled workers so they can get back on track quickly as demand rises. All of these reforms have put German companies in a more competitive position. Second, as we’ve discussed, major emerging markets from China to Brazil have not only restored growth but are sustaining it. Germany’s export sector is in a strong position to take advantage of that. So, the “German miracle” is what has enabled that country to benefit from the “Chinese miracle.” Gardels : Where do you come down on the global debate between whether it is time to cut back and move toward austerity vs. continuing stimulus spending by governments? Spence : There are such large differences among countries that it is hard to come down on any one position. There is a difficult balance between maintaining enough support to avoid a deflationary downward spiral on the one hand, and the longer-term costs of high debts and deficits on the other. It is not surprising there is lively debate about this because there are good arguments on both sides. As far as the United States is concerned, I would be on the conservative side at the moment. On the fiscal stimulus side, we’ve done about as much as we can do. I’m very much in favor of extending long-term unemployment benefits because they are essential to protect people while at the same time providing a stimulus. If you are going to spend limited resources, this is a good place to do it. But, beyond that, the U.S. is in for a period of painful restructuring of balance sheets to deleverage decades of overspending by borrowing. That will take time to work through. I don’t think you can accelerate the recovery by further government spending. It just won’t yield much benefit. America has clearly not yet come to terms with the fact that a healthy long-term future depends on suffering short-term pain. As much as we might wish it, there is no painless recovery after such a long bout of overleveraging. That pain must involve both tax increases, partly to increase public-sector investment in infrastructure that has been way too low, and budget cuts in some government services to help further finance those same infrastructure investments. Tax cuts, only if they stimulate job creation, must also surely be part of the mix. What worries me most is that as we — so far unsuccessfully — try to gather the political consensus to take decisive action, opportunities for the younger generation are shrinking. They are going to pay a high price in the short and medium term. Gardels : Fifty years ago, California made the kind of massive public investments — in a world-class university system, a vast road grid and canals to bring water from north to south — that China is making today, from the world’s fastest trains to the cutting edge of clean-energy technologies. Yet, as we speak, California, like the U.S. as a whole, is mired in debt and political gridlock. In your final Commission report, you write with China in mind that “Experience suggests that strong, technocratic teams focused on long-term growth can provide some institutional memory and continuity of policy” — in short, effective government. “Leadership,” your report says, “requires patience, a long planning horizon and an unwavering focus on the goal of inclusive growth.” Perhaps the Western consumer democracies, where the feedback signals of politics, the media and the market all tend to steer society toward immediate gratification, could learn something these days from China? Spence : Yes, we could especially learn from the way they think about the evolution of the economy over the long term and then, in a pragmatic, non-ideological way, set about getting things done. Democracy makes it a much more complicated and time-consuming process to get from A to B, to build consensus, invest in and support those things that sustain long-term growth. It is not impossible to do that in democracies today, of course. Brazil has turned itself around, and India seems to be doing so. So there is something to learn from them as well. And, as you point out in the example of California, we were able to do that at one time in the U.S. But we’ve forgotten what it takes. Too often in some parts of the American political culture there is a narrative that simply says that “the government should provide stability and the private sector will take care of everything else.” It doesn’t work that way. And it never has, even in the U.S. It takes a commitment of resources and a long-term perspective. It is a bit like the way venture capital works. You don’t know exactly how things will unfold, but you have to have a portfolio of projects to try to create and capture emerging opportunities. In the developing countries that are successful, they think more in terms of a complementary relationship between the public and private sector. Gardels : Is there a cultural issue here? Do societies dominated by a consumer mentality have the political gumption anymore to save and sacrifice for the longer term? Spence : I’m not sure I understand the underlying forces that have led us to short-termism and underinvestment. But I do know changing that is above all a political process of building consensus for responsible governance. Those who think all you need to do is cut taxes and everything else will fall in place are wrong. For a country of our level of income and wealth, the state of the infrastructure has become an embarrassment. Why can’t we set a goal in America of having first-class infrastructure in 15 years? Gardels : You said recently, “I have this gnawing feeling about the future of America. When people lose their sense of optimism, things tend to get more volatile. The future I most fear for America is Latin American: a grossly unequal society that is prone to wild swings from populism to orthodoxy, which makes sensible government increasingly hard to imagine.” You mentioned the Tea Party movement as one example. What can be done to prevent the U.S. from becoming like Latin America? Spence : I don’t know how to get there politically. But I imagine there is still a non-ideological middle in America that is patriotic but not overly nationalistic. We were once a very pragmatic nation with the ability to compromise to move things forward. If we believe what we say — that America is the land of opportunity for all and that is why people want to come here — then we need the policies that will make that actually true. Many are worried about the stubbornly high U.S. unemployment rate, but believe we will get back to normal after the recession is over. But going back to where we were is not realistic. The emerging economies are going to be more than 50 percent of global GDP in the not-too-distant future. It is a changing world. We can’t afford to stand still and settle for endless political gridlock. I think the U.S. can change, but, to be honest, I just don’t see the political will at the moment. © GLOBAL VIEWPOINT NETWORK/TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES

Read the full article →

GM IPO: Will You Buy Shares In The New General Motors? (POLL)

August 19, 2010

DETROIT (AP) – Thirteen months ago, General Motors was fighting for its life in bankruptcy court. Now, the automaker is laying the groundwork to sell stock to the public once again with the eventual goal of ridding itself of government ownership. General Motors Co. filed the first batch of paperwork required to hold an initial public offering of stock late Wednesday. The 700-page document submitted to regulators laid out reasons, and risks, to investors considering buying GM stock. The filing, called an S-1, was short on specifics. GM didn’t say how many shares would be sold or when, although experts say the IPO could come as early as October. It also didn’t say how many shares GM’s majority owner, the U.S. government, plans to unload. Such a sale would eventually lead to the government shrinking its big stake in the automaker, something GM is eager to see. The company’s outgoing CEO, Ed Whitacre, has said government ownership has hurt GM’s public image and sales. However, GM warned in its filing that the U.S. Treasury would continue to own a “substantial interest” in the automaker following the IPO. More details about the offering is likely to emerge with additional filings in the coming weeks and months. GM did say its stakeholders initially will sell common stock, while the company itself will sell preferred shares, which are like bonds and include dividend payments. GM said it will use proceeds from the preferred stock sale for general business expenses. The filing means GM and its current owners are likely to sell part of their stakes in several offerings that will take months to finish, said Scott Sweet, owner of IPO research firm IPO Boutique. Analysts have speculated that the initial sale could be worth up to $20 billion, but the filing gave no number. GM would have to bring in $70 billion just to pay back all the automaker’s stakeholders. That could come in several sales over months. The U.S. government now owns about 61 percent of GM, which it got in exchange for giving the company $50 billion in survival aid last year. GM has repaid $6.7 billion, and the remaining $43.3 billion was converted to the ownership stake. Other stakeholders include a United Auto Workers health-care trust and the Canadian government. Demand for GM’s new shares isn’t known. In the coming weeks, the company will pitch itself to big investors such as pension, mutual and hedge funds. Many of the shares will go to those larger players, but small investors will also get a chance to buy in. There are risks. The IPO market is weak. And GM, which lost about $100 billion in the five years leading up to last year’s bankruptcy, is hardly a sure bet. Still, a quick run through bankruptcy court cleansed GM of burdensome debt. It closed 12 factories and its labor costs were cut dramatically through deals with the United Auto Workers union. Helped by those cost cuts, GM earned a healthy $2.2 billion in the first half of this year despite depressed U.S. auto sales. It’s set up to do better if sales rebound, especially in fast-growing countries like Brazil and China, where GM plans to launch nearly 20 vehicles in the next two years. The company gave investors a lengthy list of risks on Wednesday, including restructuring costs and concerns about the competitiveness of its vehicles. For example, the Chevrolet Volt, its highly anticipated electric car due for release this year, requires battery technology “that has not yet proven to be commercially viable. There can be no assurances that these advances will occur in a timely or feasible way.” Even new executives were listed as risk factors. GM acknowledged that incoming CEO Daniel Akerson and Chief Financial Officer Chris Liddell have “no outside automotive industry experience” and said it was important for the management team to “quickly adapt and excel” in their new roles. Both, however, have extensive experience with successful companies. Akerson held top posts for telecommunications firms and Liddell served as CFO of Microsoft Corp. GM said the company was dependent upon global car and truck sales and said “there is no assurance that the global automobile market will recover in the near future or that it will not suffer a significant further downturn.” The company said it had no plans to pay dividends on its common stock and future dividends would be determined by its board of directors. The company said it will trade on the New York Stock Exchange under the ticker “GM,” the symbol under which it traded before it entered bankruptcy. Shares will also trade in Canada on the Toronto Stock Exchange, but the ticker symbol hasn’t been determined. Francis Gaskins, president of IPOdesktop.com, said GM’s decision to sell preferred shares rather than common stock is a sign that it is having trouble attracting interest from investors and felt the need to sweeten the offering with the preferred dividends. “Only a company that’s not strong would do that,” he said. “It’s a tip-off that the investment community needs something special.” The new preferred shares will be converted to an unknown number of common stock sometime in 2013, the filing said. GM also said in the filing that said outgoing CEO Ed Whitacre, who leaves Sept. 1, will get a compensation package worth around $9 million. He gets a $1.7 million annual salary and the rest in stock. ___ AP Auto Writer Dan Strumpf contributed to this story from New York.

Read the full article →

China’s Slowdown Sends A Chill Through Trade Partners

August 17, 2010

BEIJING — China’s abrupt growth slowdown is sending a chill through Asian economies and as far away as Australia and Africa as its voracious demand for imports fades. Beijing is cooling its economy with lending and investment curbs after explosive 11.9 percent first-quarter growth fed fears of overheating. Growth is slowing more sharply than expected, cutting demand for American and European factory machinery, industrial components from Asia and iron ore and other raw materials from Australia and Africa. The timing is awkward for exporters that were buoyed by China’s quick rebound from the global crisis and are seeing sales elsewhere weaken. The country had become more important than ever to its neighbors as its stimulus-driven expansion helped to cushion the blow of weak U.S. and European sales. “It’s definitely going to show in slower growth in all of the Asian economies that send goods to China,” said Mark Walton, senior economist for brokerage CLSA Asia-Pacific Markets. China, which overtook Japan as the second-biggest economy in the second quarter, is a major market for Asian nations. It buys 28 percent of Taiwan’s exports, 25 percent of South Korea’s and more than 20 percent of mining giant Australia’s. More than half of Hong Kong’s exports go to the mainland. Japan, which Monday reported sharply lower second quarter growth, saw a significant slowing in exports to China during the period. Its exports to China in April were up 41 percent from a year earlier but by June the growth rate had slackened to 22 percent. But suppliers of iron ore for steel production and other raw materials are expected to be hardest-hit by slowing growth in China. They range from Australia, Indonesia and Malaysia to Brazil and parts of Africa and profited from a construction boom fed by China’s 4 trillion yuan ($586 billion) stimulus and a flood of bank lending. “Chinese efforts to prevent overheating in asset markets will have negative effects on our markets,” CEO Tom Albanese of Anglo-Australian miner Rio Tinto Ltd. said this month. Construction faded fast as Beijing wound down its stimulus and clamped down on credit in April to prevent bubbles in real estate and stock prices. That slowed a surge in housing costs but slashed demand for steel, cement and other materials. That prompted some forecasters to cut their growth outlook for this year, though they say China easily can meet the government’s target of 8 percent. The expansion in Chinese factory output, retail sales and investment slowed so sharply that some analysts said Beijing might need to ease its controls to revive growth, which fell to 10.3 percent in the second quarter and is expected to drift lower. July import growth fell to 22.7 percent over a year earlier from June’s 34.1 percent, startling economists who expected a decline of only a few percentage points. Housing sales plunged 19.3 percent from a year earlier and auto sales weakened. Suppliers of manufactured goods also face a hit, though less severe. Taiwan is a major source of components for Chinese factories that make televisions and other electronics, many for export to the United States. The island could suffer a double blow as Chinese and U.S. spending weaken at the same time. “I expect to see smaller economic growth for quarter two than quarter one, and the upcoming quarters will again see smaller growth than quarter two,” said Hu Chung-ying, vice chairman of the Cabinet’s Council for Economic Planning and Development. ___ Associated Press Writers Debby Wu in Taipei and Tanalee Smith in Adelaide, Australia, contributed to this report.

Read the full article →

Inder Sidhu: How to Give Up Power and Get More Done

August 12, 2010

Cross-posted from Washington Post: On Leadership Would you give up some of your authority and responsibility if it resulted in accomplishing more? For the better part of a decade, management gurus and business strategists have been advising business leaders to do no less. Not surprisingly, there’s been a lot of push-back against “decentralized decision making,” which some business leaders view with suspicion. Relinquish power and influence after spending years trying to amass it? Not likely, many say. But the debate about whether to share power or hold fast to it is evolving. Instead of choosing between a traditional command-and-control management model, or a more egalitarian one, smart business leaders are embracing the power of the “and.” That’s what we are doing at Cisco, where I have been served on the executive leadership team for the past 15 years. For much of its history, Cisco operated with a traditional command-and-control management model. We relied on senior vice presidents, vice presidents, directors, and so on to make decisions, channeling power downward through a hierarchical pyramid of authority. The benefits to this model were many. Among other things, the structure allowed Cisco to scale its best practices and drive accountability throughout the company. These disciplines served us well during the heady growth years of the 1990s, when billions of dollars and thousands of employees poured into the company and a few product lines drove the majority of revenue. But the need for something more became apparent when the company expanded into telephony, the consumer market and beyond. Suddenly, important decisions began lining up on the desks of company executives like planes waiting for clearance at an airport. That’s when the leadership team decided to drive decision making deeper into the organization. But instead of abandoning our traditional management model, Cisco did something truly unique: It adopted a two-pronged model that combines the efficiency and accountability of a command-and-control hierarchy with the creativity and flexibility of a decentralized model. This corporate structure isn’t a choice between command-and-control or decentralized decision making, but a judicious blend of both. By blending the best of both models, Cisco can better anticipate opportunities and prepare for challenges, rather than merely reacting to them. Here’s how it works. Adjacent to its traditional management structure, Cisco established a new leadership mechanism, which draws upon key influencers from across the company. Their mission: Set strategy across key customer segments and market transitions and make quick course corrections when needed. To accomplish their work, the influencers participate on cross-functional teams. These teams are accountable for revenue growth, profit contribution, customer satisfaction, and market share in their customer segments, while the traditional business functions maintain responsibility for efficient functional execution in support of these goals. Thanks to these interlocking management models, Cisco has significantly accelerated its work. Take emerging countries. In 2006, I helped create the Emerging Countries Council (ECC) to support Cisco’s efforts in Brazil, Russia, India, China, Latin America, the Middle East and Africa. At the time, we had just launched our new Emerging Markets region, which reported into Cisco’s traditional leadership hierarchy. That region had wide responsibility for almost everything that Cisco does in emerging countries. But what it didn’t have is the authority to command other parts of the company to work on its behalf. That’s where the council lent a hand. The ECC worked with key functional leaders to set a vision and strategy, and then reached across internal silos to engage manufacturing, legal, IT, and other parts of the company. What is the best way to serve customers who speak Pashto, trade in Afghanis, and have technology needs in Afghanistan, where you need clearance from the U.S. Department of Defense just to make contact? The council helped figure it out. There were dozens of challenges like this. The council established supply lines, institutionalized accountability and aligned functions. When the ECC determined that the sales efforts in the field needed additional financial support, the council secured an additional $58 million for emerging countries in 2007, a year of tight budgets. Results were immediate. In its first full year, the emerging countries business grew by more than 30 percent, and momentum continued thereafter. Over the first two years, Cisco entered more than 30 new emerging countries. Could such a dual management model benefit your company? I believe that it can. The key is operating both models simultaneously and leveraging each for the betterment of the other. Authoritative leadership or democratic decision making? At Cisco, we’re doing both. Inder Sidhu is the Senior Vice President of Strategy & Planning for Worldwide Operations at Cisco , and the author of Doing Both: How Cisco Captures Today’s Profits and Drives Tomorrow’s Growth . Follow Inder on Twitter at @indersidhu . Cross-posted from Washington Post: On Leadership

Read the full article →

Charles Kolb: The Building Blocks of Corporate Statesmanship

July 23, 2010

Jørgen Vig Knudstorp is not a household name in America. And those few who may know him probably can’t pronounce his name. Or remember how to spell it. But there are millions of American children and parents who know the company he runs and use his products every day. Mr. Vig Knudstorp is the CEO of the Danish-based children’s company we know as LEGO. As an educational “toy,” the value of the LEGO building blocks has been phenomenal. What the company, now more than 80-years-old, calls the LEGO system of play — “learning through LEGO” — considers young children as role models for our future and as creative problem-solvers. Their CEO is quite sincere when he says that what the company really cares about is inspiring the young people who will build our tomorrow. Is this just more corporate happy talk? Hardly. The founding CEO of Google, Larry Page, has called LEGO the most important technology he has encountered: those little blocks taught him literally how to think digitally and algorithmically. LEGO is a company that is all about play – about exploring the connections between creative play and learning, about approaching play as a catalyst for learning. The company is focused on the future — not short-term, but long-term. Over the last two years, I have had the pleasure of spending time with Mr. Vig Knudstorp on three continents: Europe, North America, and, last month, South America – at an early education forum in Sao Paulo, Brazil . With support from the Bernard Van Leer Foundation in The Hague , the Committee for Economic Development, along with LEGO Education, United Way Brasil, Conselho Empresarial da America Latina, Todos Pela Educação, and Instituto para o Desenvolvimento do Investimento Social, co-sponsored a day-long forum for Brazilian business leaders about the important economic returns associated with public and private investments in early education. Our goal was to increase the number of Brazilian business leaders who support expanded investments in early childhood education. After the conference ended, I spent part of the next day with Vig Knudstorp and a LEGO team visiting a school supported by the company in one of the more than 1,500 slums (” favelas “) found throughout Sao Paulo, a city with more than 19 million residents. LEGO Education has an approach called ” Brick by Brick: The Brazil We Want ” that is working with dozens of schools throughout the country to improve education. The school we visited is in “Heliopolis,” Sao Paulo’s second largest favela and home to some 120,000 people. This trip was Vig Knudstorp’s first visit to Brazil — but certainly not his last. LEGO’s commitment is tangible – not just because of the LEGO blocks we saw the children playing with but also in the impact LEGO is having among these very poor children and their families. One could see hope, excitement, pride – and, yes, creativity. In one classroom, the students showed us an award they had won last year for a creative LEGO design. The award itself was a trophy made from LEGOs, and it rested on a LEGO stand. Two of the young children proudly presented it to the LEGO CEO. Vig Knudstorp reached into his pocket and took out his business card — something unique among global CEOs, I suspect: his business card is a little LEGO figure of himself. (You can change his hair, if you like, and move his arms and legs. His name is on the front; his personal e-mail address is on the back. If you write to him, he’ll write you back.) He adjusted the arms on his “card” so that they were raised up, to the sky, and then he gently placed the little figure on the stand so that it was facing the award — arms raised in celebration and joy at the children’s success. It was a moment with these children that was unforgettable. In his remarks the previous day at the forum, Vig Knudstorp reflected on what his company’s efforts might mean to a broader, international business community. He made three points. First, in older, industrial societies, people went to work and mostly did what they were told. Those days are over: the workforce of today and of the future will not emphasize obedience but, instead creativity, and a passion for what workers do. This workforce will be much more logical, systematic, and analytical. Second, an IBM survey of some 1,500 global CEOs noted that the biggest challenges they faced had to do with the ability of their organizations to relate to diverse corporate stakeholders; the ability to foster “dexterous” organizations that could act quickly, change as needed, and be self-correcting in a bottoms-up rather than top-down approach; and the ability to generate creativity throughout all aspects of a company’s business. Third, Vig Knudstorp sees fundamentally two types of companies that will exist in our future: companies that essentially work for themselves and companies that focus not on what they make but on “why” they make it. The former, he says, often put the cart before the horse, whereas the latter consider, as part of their operations, the impact they have on the environment, their communities, and their countries. Focusing on an issue such as early childhood education offers companies and their leaders a great “why” instead of just focusing on what companies and business leaders do for themselves. Moreover, in his view, the most talented employees in the future will prefer to work for companies that have a strong “why.” Are there lessons from this Dane and his extraordinary company for American business and its CEOs? There are many: about long-term investments in education and the workforce, about the values that animate a corporate environment, about encouraging creativity instead of “groupthink,” about building self-correcting mechanisms inside companies that don’t wait for the regulator to step in once the bubble has burst, and about creating a sense of purpose that goes beyond quarterly earnings reports and compensation. Corporate America right now has a terrible perception among the American public at large. The building blocks for turning around this situation are right there, before our eyes. ______________________________________________________________ Charles Kolb served in the first Bush White House from 1990-1992 and as General Counsel of United Way of America from 1992-1997. He is now President of the Committee for Economic Development in Washington, D.C. The views in this article are solely the author’s.

Read the full article →